Commenting on Engadget: a human's guide

Furthermore, we recognize that our comment system isn't perfect, and we're working with our developers right now to dramatically change things. We can promise you guys that we spend (and will spend) a lot of time thinking about how to make this a better community, and make the commenting experience more enjoyable and useful to everyone. You have our word that we're listening to you, and there will be noticeable changes for the better in the near future. And guys (and girls): definitely provide feedback on this post or via our contact email addresses. We want to hear what you have to say!
Since we've gotten the ball rolling again, we want to make sure everyone is aware of just what we expect of our community here, so we're going to lay down our ground rules (most of which have been culled from our FAQ). Here we go:
In general: The Engadget comments section is a place for our readers to engage in discussion about the posts -- it's really that simple. We encourage that discussion, and we'll be the first to admit that lots of times our readers offer insights that lead us to update our posts, or direct us to entirely new angles and stories. We love that, and we love our readers. We seriously do.
Some basic ideas on commenting here. We think that comments should always be on topic. We encourage and welcome debate, even if it's fervent, because we know how much you care about this stuff -- we care about it, too! However, your comments should be reasonably polite and wherever possible, lighthearted. Making personal attacks against other commenters, publications, or our own editors seriously degrades the community and quality of the discussion, and it won't be tolerated.
While we're fine with disagreements, we're not that crazy about being the battleground for epic fanboy wars. We want you to debate, but when that debate devolves into name calling and / or cyclical fanaticism (especially when you've moved way off topic), it's not a good use of anyone's brainpower. Also, if you've come to Engadget for the express purpose of whipping people into a frenzy (or whipping yourself into a frenzy), don't expect to stick around very long. It's easy to spot the folks who want to have a healthy debate and the folks who just want to troll. On that note, we encourage our readers and commenters to reach out to us personally and report other commenters who seem to be acting inhuman... or inhumane. Together, we believe we can improve the quality of comments on the site. We are aware of the fact that any system like ours can be gamed -- and we're aware of the fact that people actually do things like make multiple profiles and argue with themselves simply to cause problems. Just be aware we'll delete and ban you for that, too!
Comment deletion: There are many reasons your comment might be deleted, but here are some of the most common ones. Spamming of any type, be it human or robot-generated, is always deleted. If you're trying to sell something in comments, you're a spammer. Trolling is also unacceptable -- we recognize that a lot of you trolls don't even realize that you're trolls, but believe us -- you are. We'll delete your comments if we feel they're disruptive or annoying. We also delete comments that are racist, sexist, overly obscene, or offensive in any way. We delete comments which are personal attacks -- whether directed at an editor or another commenter. Finally, we reserve the right to delete any comment at our discretion (please see below).
If you create a history of trolling or other offensive behavior, we'll just ban your account. That means that your username, email, and potentially IP address will be barred from our system, and you'll no longer be able to comment.
You deleted my comment. Isn't that censorship? No. Engadget, along with its partner Weblogs, Inc. and parent company AOL allow comments in order to further the discussion, engage our readers, and to let interested parties have a good time (and maybe learn something)! Engadget's commenting sections are NOT open forums where you can say whatever you please, and commenting on Engadget is not a right of law passed down to you in the Constitution. Engadget is a news site and a business. The editorial staff does not delete comments without good reason, but deletions are always at the discretion of the editors. There are thousands of active commenters on Engadget, and we try to keep the comment sections a fun, engaging experience for all of its readers.
Why can't I up / downrank an editor? Well first off, because he / she is an editor. That doesn't make them better than a regular commenter, but it does mean that when they have something to say, we feel it's important that all readers can see it, whether they like it or not!
There's a comment that's offensive to me. What can I do about it? Well, as already mentioned, you can downrank it. Furthermore, there's a "report" button above the ranking icons on all comments which will alert our staff that the comment has been flagged. We do look at reported comments, and delete where we deem appropriate. Keep in mind, however, that we know who is reporting what comments, so think before you report -- you don't want to be on our watchlist for reporting a comment for no reason at all, because that doesn't help anybody, does it?
Finally, we realize that we're ultimately responsible for the tone of comments here, and moving forward, we're going to be more vigilant about watching out for problems. We love Engadget, and we take full responsibility for its quality. We also love our readers, and want to make it a safe, enjoyable place for all who wish to participate. Now say something hilarious!






















Hooray for the celebrations of dinosaurs and giant love hearts, the comments are back and the haters be damned.
Anyone else feeling a simple like and dislike button on posts to be able to quickly add your voice to the popularity vote without commenting?
Couldn't we both rank the editors' comments AND keep them visible? Are they mutually exclusive?
Wow there's a lot of comments on this post! Although I don't comment much on Engadget, I do read them, and often they are insightful, ... apart from the past couple of weeks, where there has been a band-wagon of almost hate-mongering!
Engadget was well within their rights to make the call of "letting people cool off". Although the site did lose something at that point. And Yes, I check-in on Engadget maybe 10 - 15 times a day, as don't have the iPhone / Pre / (soon to be ) Android App... so have to do it old-school way :D
Good to see comments back on and look forward to what changes may be made guys! Keep up the UNBIASED writing (some people don't get it - it's ok - they will eventually)
Hmm I tried to post a comment and it didn't work... lets see if this one works.
@zsmorr
Oh cool, I just had to log out and back in for whatever reason.
Anyways what I tried to say before was I don't fully understand why the comments were blocked before. The amount of trolling was no worse that it always is whenever a new product is announced/released. If people are so annoyed by them they could very easily not read them.
And also I get a lot of information out of the comments, and also they are entertaining to read. I refused to read any of the stories while comments were disabled.
I was actually so lost in tech news I had to go to gizmodo! Have you ever been to that site?? its horrible! Please don't do this ever again.
Testing 123..
Thanks Engadget! There are so many flamers on Engadget and pretty much all other major blogs that just about the entire internet community needs a reality check.
Finally back on! Can't wait to see that "Toad" fellow get his IP banned... that guy's a jerk.
To be honest I love whatever engadget do, so good on you Joshua!
In grade school, whenever the teacher reprimanded the class, there was always this one kid who would ask, "But not me, right? I was well behaved, right? I followed the instructions, right?"
Today I'm that kid.
I'm a good commenter, right? I do it correctly, right? I'm a valuable member of the Engadget community, right? Right?!?!
good to hear its back, lets hope you dont turn like other sites (***modo) who censor or even ban accouts when they dont agree with the comments, such as anything that doesnt say apple=god will get deleted, anything that suggest jobs or apple isnt god gets deleted, and when you have any type of constructive critism or even simple comments like" hey you posted the same thing three times before" or something along that line they ban your account. so filter, censor, ban, whatever you need to keep spammers and extreme offensive people out, but please try to keep from getting too power hungry with your hammers for us normal people with opinions and comments...
@daewootech bad news buddy... comments and people getting removed and banned all over the place in here since the blackout and this post. I'd go into more detail but why bother, someone with nothing better to do is going to remove this
oh yeah and i do think post ratings would be informational for everyone, not just rating the editors the individual posts themselves. it could give you a good knowledge of what people like and what they dont (free demo graphical and survey type info) as well as could act as a good check for when you get days where you do things like lets say, take the live blog post of the ipad event, and chop it up into individual posts so that the people who were faithfully refreshing the live updates dont have to jump back out and read 10 posts recapping what they already read
The comment section usually provides me with better alternatives and links to more information on said products so im glad to see em back, personally i dont get the fanboy wars and think such people are a little lacking to get so worked up over a static piece of kit regardless of whom it came from, me im a tech lover and jump from sony to apple to nokia to microsoft to whomever, i go an actually play with the thing and if i love it and it suits my needs i buy it...
The comment section usually provides me with better alternatives and links to more information on said products so im glad to see em back, personally i dont get the fanboy wars and think such people are a little lacking to get so worked up over a static piece of kit regardless of whom it came from, me im a tech lover and jump from sony to apple to nokia to microsoft to whomever, i go an actually play with the thing and if i love it and it suits my needs i buy it...
I'm with engadget on this. Sure I didn't see an increase in bad comments lately, but it wasn't that great to start with. Behave civilized people. This is not an anarchy, there are other sites for that.
wow.i wonder what people said in their comments that was so bad...and how many could have possibly been that bad to turn comments off.i mean if 2% of comments are unsavory,should you have really turned em all off??
Dude, I've been gone for like a day and all this stuff happens? I don't even know how all this started.
I'm glad comments are back.
I'm rather pleased that you stopped comments for a while, etc. Flamewars, fanboy taunting and the like get monotonous when all one is after is a look at some new techie wizardry.
I am commenter #519 or so, so no one will ever read this. But I want to say that I love Engadget and it was a bummer not having the comments over the past few days. The comments really add another layer of insight and info most of the time.
I'm glad commenting is back and the trolls and spammers can suck a big one.
The comments are valuable. I'm glad they have cleaned up the system though. Hopefully the people who like to flame others will find somewhere else to go.
I made a post on here early this morning and I didn't personally attack anyone. But, low and behold, no comment here now.
What a surprise........comment-nazis strike again.
W-what? No epic fanboy/girl ((Girl, in meh case.)) wars? D:
Well I'm doubtful wether Engadget got te message this time. They know that ppl have the power. A lot of apple hate comments didnt come out of nothing. It had to do with the +++positive way of presenting the Ipad by apple itselve and negative way by apple speaking of the loved netbook and kindle + to much post by engadget of this ipad thinking ppl would apreciate this. Well ppl didnt So, therefor ppl naturally reacted. So I hope Engadget won't make that mistake again. Please Engadget dont blame the readers because they are always right and you of all should know this! So some apolagize to the readers would be in place.
One thing. I would like to not only rank on the comments but on the posts to. So if they are really bad and some of them realy were lately, we, the readers could down-rank it into oblivion. But to avoid only downranking, one has to down and up rank the same amount.
Have I been banned?
Am I too late? I havn't really been paying attention much since the comments were turned off. Oh well.
...I can't quit you Engadget!
Thanks for turning comments back on. It's half of what makes this site superior to other tech news sites to me (the other half being the design).
....soudns like some overly sensitive readers shoudl sjut buck up and grow a pair geeze.
engadget, thanks for induldging this nonsense
i can understand deleting trolls, adds and racism, but come on, its the internet people you will be made fun of and ridiculed.
i guess we should all want world peace too
@hexideciml
I'm cool with taking ridicule, but having comments down ranked into oblivion (and thus hidden from being read unless the reader feels compelled to see what it was) gives too much control to the reader base when such comments provide value and spark debate.
I can understand deleting obvious trolls and abusive comments, but deleting comments somewhat critical of Engadget's position, especially when it is on-topic, is nothing short of censorship.
@nimblesquirrel
I concur, but I am curious on an example. Could you provide me an example of a post where such a situation occurred? This isn't to say that I don't believe you, I just want to further understand the scope of such actions.
Thanks.
@nanascho
I'd love to provide you with an example. I made a post at 3:44am, just before Digital's post. It was somewhat critical of Engadget's position, stating that I don't believe they needed to shut down the commenting system, and that the abusive comments were a symptom of a bigger problem of the editors not paying attention to the trend of the discussions (and the growing dissatisfaction many commenters were having with the sheer number of iPad posts). It was not abusive and was not an attack on any one person. It was just my opinion. I guess it hit a nerve because it was deleted within minutes. There was no notification of the deletion, or explanation why it was deleted. It simply ceased to exist. The thing is that it didn't really say anything new, as other people have made similar comments (and those comments have gone on to be highly ranked).
Though most of the comments are pointless, everything seemed even more pointless without them.
My general concern is the up/down ranking system -- My last comment about the iPad was made of well thought out thoughts on how the debate of the iPad had become more of a spectacle than the iPad itself. Sure I provided my opinion on what I believe to be fundamental elements that should be found in a device and compared it to non-apple products to provide perspective as well as previous Engadget posts and even some good 'ol XKCD. Instead I got torn apart for my (what I viewed as valid) remarks and down ranked into oblivion. Nothing I said was racist or directly intended to offend, but clearly a defensive mass of fanatics felt my post to be not worth of intelligent debate. Yes, your comment system needs to be changed. My colleague, an avid slashdot.org reader told me about how their commenting system works. (see: http://slashdot.org/faq/com-mod.shtml -- Section: "How did the moderation system develop" ) Perhaps that is an angle to consider.
it's about time engadget is stepping in. a lot of users on this site are straight out rude and very negative to others. i get the most smerky people always replying to my comments; haters that need to be spending more time on junky chat servers instead of this "TECH BLOG". who needs that drama here, go be dirty somewhere else and please get a life.
You guys are becoming more like Apple every day (and yes that is meant as an insult)....
I love the comments. We can always downrank the bad ones. The remedial measure sucks. I read engadget in my RSS reader (thunderbird) and no matter what I do I cannot turn on comments. Get rid of this madness. Gimme the old engadget back
its a good guide, i guess
- Mark Szczygiel