Eleanorg/thesis/consentInOnlineSystems: Difference between revisions

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Doodle lets anyone with the URL of a poll share their preferred days for a meeting, via a simple calendar 'polling' interface.Users of Doodle aren't ''consenting'' to anything per se - it is intended as an information-gathering tool to help the meeting planner chose the best date. However, it is an interesting example of the way that individual vs group preferences can be recorded and displayed. Its aim, like that of Wikipedia, is to arrive at a consensus - a date which may not suit everybody, but is the best of the possible options having taken group members' preferences into account.
Doodle lets anyone with the URL of a poll share their preferred days for a meeting, via a simple calendar 'polling' interface. Users of Doodle aren't ''consenting'' to anything per se - it is intended as an information-gathering tool to help a meeting planner chose the best date. However, it is an interesting example of the way that individual vs group preferences can be recorded and displayed. Its aim, like that of Wikipedia, is to arrive at a consensus - a date which may not suit everybody, but is the best of the possible options having taken group members' preferences into account.
 
 
'''What is its grammar of consent?''' In Doodle (unlike Wikipedia), in any given instance a proposal can only be made by one person, the poll initiator. The initiator chooses which dates to include in the poll, thus delimiting the choices presented. The single initiator therefore seeks the views of a number of other people. Only those who are 'invited', by being sent the poll URL, may participate in the poll. For each date, participants have only two choices: to check the box (meaning, I can make it), or to leave it unchecked (can't make it). Checked dates turn green, unchecked dates turn red.
 
'''How is consent signified?''' For each date, users may check the box, or leave it blank. If no dates are suitable, the participant may save the form without checking any boxes, or click a button reading "Can't make it", which also submits the form blank. By implication, then, checking a box signifies "I can make it". There is no option in the form to signal "maybe" - any ambiguities must be recorded in a separate comments box below the poll, which is not semantically linked to it. The system narrows users' options in order to produce a clear numeric 'favourite'; thus the checked boxes can only be a rough guide, and not a reliable indication of felt preferences or desires.




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* [[User:Eleanorg/1.2/RWR/Annotation: Towards A Performance Model of Sex | Millar, Thomas M. (2008)]] 'Towards a Performance Model of Sex', in Freidman, J. & Valenti, J. (eds) Yes Means Yes: Visions of Female Sexual Power and a World Without Rape (California: Seal Press).
* [[User:Eleanorg/1.2/RWR/Annotation: Towards A Performance Model of Sex | Millar, Thomas M. (2008)]] 'Towards a Performance Model of Sex', in Freidman, J. & Valenti, J. (eds) Yes Means Yes: Visions of Female Sexual Power and a World Without Rape (California: Seal Press).

Revision as of 21:06, 26 January 2013

How consent is understood & encoded in various online collaboration systems.

Today I'm going to look at how consent is understood and encoded in three systems for online collaboration: Wikipedia, e-consensus, and Doodle. While designed for varied use-cases, what these systems have in common is that they accept input from various users, and allow users to co-ordinate that input by offering various ways of establishing consensus.

In order to examine how 'consent' is understood in these systems, I'll use a theory of consent outlined by legal theorist Kleinig (2010) in his essay "The Nature of Consent". This essay offers a useful framework in which consent has (among others), the following three components:

  • The grammar of consent.
Who is involved, and how they interact. (Kleinig favours the following grammar: 'A consented (to B) to P.' P is the proposed action, B seeks consent, and A gives it.)
  • The ontology of consent
Is consent a state of mind, or must it be an action? (Kleinig argues for the latter (ibid p.10).
  • Signification
If consent is a communicative act, which signifiers can be understood as giving consent?

How the grammar, ontology and signification of consent are understood are political questions. For example: feminists campaigning against sexual violence will stress that consent must be a communicative act, not merely a state of mind. They are also likely to propose certain acceptable signifiers ('Yes means yes'), while discrediting others. And some even question the grammar outlined by Kleinig, arguing that a view of consent in which it is 'sought' and 'given' encodes unequal and polarized (gendered) subject positions.(find examples).

Thus, it is an interesting exercise to examine which 'flavours' are chosen for each of these three attributes by various organizations or pieces of software, and how these are then encoded technologically/socially.

Wikipedia

Wikipedia articles may be edited by many users, with the aim of arriving at a consensus on the text.

What is Wikipedia's grammar of consent? In Kleinig's terms, consent is given by A to B, for P. Here, P is any change to the text. B is the editor making the change. She seeks the consent of (plural) A, all other users. Wikipedia's grammar of consent thus conforms to a fairly conservative one in which consent is 'sought' and 'given' (challenged by feminists such as Millar (2008) and Kramer Bussel (2008)). However, it begins to stretch this grammar, as multiple users make proposals in an ongoing and collaborative process. A does not merely play the passive role of saying 'yes' or 'no', but is expected to be an active agent contributing her own changes if she disagrees. This expectation of agency informs how consent is signified.

How is consent signified? In its policy on consensus, Wikipedia (2013a) states clearly that: "Any edit that is not disputed or reverted by another editor can be assumed to have consensus." A related essay linked from this statement, "Silence and Consensus" (Wikipedia Editors, 2013b) - though not a policy document - comments that "Consensus can be presumed to exist until voiced disagreement becomes evident... [because] In wiki-editing, it is difficult to get positive affirmation for your edits..." (ibid). Kleinig himself notes that signifiers are culturally-specific, and may include silence in some cases (Kleinig 2010, p.11). Because of this, "there must be a convention whereby consent given is recognized as such" (ibid). Wikipedia's policy on Consensus attempts to set in place this convention. However, this convention is not without controversy. The Wikipedia Essay "Silence Means Nothing" gives several examples of things that silence may signify other than consent: "polite disagreement", not having seen, or choosing to ignore an edit (Wikipedia Editors 2013c).

What is the ontology of consent? Because consent in Wikipedia is signalled by silence, there is no clear distinction made between a state of mind, and the act of giving consent. Indeed, the only actions available to editors are ones which signal lack of consent. (Excepting perhaps the 'Wiki love' feature, whereby users express appreciation to other editors - although this isn't strictly a signal of consent.)

Doodle

DoodlePoll.png

Doodle lets anyone with the URL of a poll share their preferred days for a meeting, via a simple calendar 'polling' interface. Users of Doodle aren't consenting to anything per se - it is intended as an information-gathering tool to help a meeting planner chose the best date. However, it is an interesting example of the way that individual vs group preferences can be recorded and displayed. Its aim, like that of Wikipedia, is to arrive at a consensus - a date which may not suit everybody, but is the best of the possible options having taken group members' preferences into account.


What is its grammar of consent? In Doodle (unlike Wikipedia), in any given instance a proposal can only be made by one person, the poll initiator. The initiator chooses which dates to include in the poll, thus delimiting the choices presented. The single initiator therefore seeks the views of a number of other people. Only those who are 'invited', by being sent the poll URL, may participate in the poll. For each date, participants have only two choices: to check the box (meaning, I can make it), or to leave it unchecked (can't make it). Checked dates turn green, unchecked dates turn red.

How is consent signified? For each date, users may check the box, or leave it blank. If no dates are suitable, the participant may save the form without checking any boxes, or click a button reading "Can't make it", which also submits the form blank. By implication, then, checking a box signifies "I can make it". There is no option in the form to signal "maybe" - any ambiguities must be recorded in a separate comments box below the poll, which is not semantically linked to it. The system narrows users' options in order to produce a clear numeric 'favourite'; thus the checked boxes can only be a rough guide, and not a reliable indication of felt preferences or desires.


  • Millar, Thomas M. (2008) 'Towards a Performance Model of Sex', in Freidman, J. & Valenti, J. (eds) Yes Means Yes: Visions of Female Sexual Power and a World Without Rape (California: Seal Press).
  • Kramer Bussel, R. (2008) 'Beyond Yes or No: Consent as Sexual Process', in Freidman, J. & Valenti, J. (eds) Yes Means Yes: Visions of Female Sexual Power and a World Without Rape (California: Seal Press).
  • Wikipedia Editors (2013a) Wikipedia:Consensus [online]. Accessed 21 Jan 2013 at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Consensus.
  • Wikipedia Editors (2013b) Wikipedia:Silence and Consensus [online]. Accessed 21 Jan 2013 athttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Silence_and_consensus
  • Wikipedia Editors (2013c) Wikipedia:Silence Means Nothing [online]. Accessed 26 Jan 2013 at: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Silence_means_nothing.