Gamergate is going after SXSW panels: how 'the downvote' gives power to the mob
I have a love/hate relationship with down voting. No, that’s a lie, I have a hate/hate relationship with down voting. I find the idea of weighing the amount of ‘nays’ vs ‘yays’ as a voting mechanic in any sort of digital space to be somewhat pointless. As an interaction designer, it makes little sense to me. A positive vote of ‘yes’ to see what is most popular works just as well, if not better than, subtracting noes from yeses. The problem with the ‘no’ option on the internet is that it allows for the creation of voting brigades whose negative clicks drown out the voices of those they don’t want heard.
I’ve been thinking about this a lot today, in particular, as a member of one of the three SXSW panels against which Gamergate has formed a voting “brigade.” The campaign is an ongoing one, designed to thwart “social justice warriors”—a Gamergate name created for people who are publicly and vocally anti-Gamergate— from giving talks, interacting with one another online, participating in contests, or even organizing social meet-ups. Regularly on Kotaku In Action, the Gamergate subreddit, there are campaigns to intimidate ‘SJWs’ and have them removed from conferences. Anti-harassment commentator Randi Harper has had her talks downvoted, as well as threats of people attending to heckle and abuse. Game critic Anita Saarkesian has received threats of violence to stop her speaking engagements. My own mother was swatted in an effort to thwart my research into the Gamergate ethnography.
SXSW, an annual conference about music, film and technology in Austin, has for years had a voting system to select its panels that consists of up votes and down votes, along with the opportunity to comment on the panel. The votes cannot be seen currently and while the audience voting accounts for only 30% of the ‘grade’ or weight towards SXSW selecting a panel, this voting mechanic still feels off. Online harassment, specifically campaign-based harassment, is changing the idea of how an audience’s voice is weighed; it’s forcing us to reconsider whether the most active and vocal truly represent the entire audience.