Title :
The Impact of Anonymity in Online Communities
Author :
Omernick, Eli ; Sood, Sara Owsley
Author_Institution :
Comput. Sci. Dept., Pomona Coll., Claremont, CA, USA
Abstract :
The scale of participation on social news sites has challenged community managers, leaving them unable to detect and remove all inappropriate content by hand. Automated insult and profanity detection systems have helped, but have failed to address the problem of why this content is contributed in the first place. That is, what implications do interface design choices have on the content being generated? One such design choice is whether or not a site allows anonymous comments. What impact does allowing anonymity have on the quality or quantity of participation on a site? This case study analyses the impact of anonymity on a technology social news site, TechCrunch.com. TechCrunch is ideal for this study in that it underwent a shift from allowing anonymous comments (using the Disqus commenting platform) to disallowing them (using the Facebook commenting platform) in March of 2011. We compare the quality of anonymous and real identity comments through measures of reading level, relevance to the target article, negativity and presence of swear words and anger words. We couple this qualitative analysis with a quantitative analysis of the change in participation to give a complete picture of the impact of anonymity in this online community, with the end goal of informing design on similar social news sites.
Keywords :
data privacy; social networking (online); Disqus commenting platform; Facebook commenting platform; TechCrunch; anonymity; anonymity impact; insult detection systems; interface design choices; online communities; participation scale; profanity detection systems; qualitative analysis; quantitative analysis; social news sites; technology social news site; Atmospheric measurements; Communities; Electronic mail; Facebook; Market research; Particle measurements; Psychology; Online communities; anonymity; comment threads; community management; negativity; profanity; user-generated content;
Conference_Titel :
Social Computing (SocialCom), 2013 International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Alexandria, VA
DOI :
10.1109/SocialCom.2013.80