I'm trying to be clear here:
Color is not a different person! Color is to make it so people skimming the thread don't miss something. It increases visibility. When using color, we tend to be short and too the point, again, to increase clarity. If we aren't writing in color, you can bet that we aren't terribly worried if someone misses the point - we probably don't see it as a fire that needs putting out, or something. We are highly unlikely to slap a ban on someone for failing to see something we wrote in white.
But Rel in Red is still Rel. Umbran is Umbran, whether in Orange or Red or White. Morrus is The Man, no matter the color. If one of us says that something is uncool, that's someone who's an authority on behavior on the boards saying something is uncool.
Heck, even if JohnQPoster says something is uncool, you should be considering that maybe that it is uncool.
I think we can all agree on that.Sorry....let me rephrase:
A major benefit to using colour-coding is to avoid sending mixed messages.
RC
That's it, mister; I'm putting your hero Hemlock the Magician on "ignore" next time we play MnM!This would enable the ability to put moderators on ignore lists. That way when a moderator is posting with their Mod Hat on the post would be flagged visible, but when posting as some guy with an opinion, I won't.
That's it, mister; I'm putting your hero Hemlock the Magician on "ignore" next time we play MnM!
This is all I mean about not being able to post as both at once: it's got to be unambiguous when you're talking in "mod-voice" and when you're just posting as a normal dude.As mods it's in our best interest to make it really clear when we're speaking in an official position, though. If I say something that I expect to be followed as a rule, and it's ambiguous, sorting out the resulting confusion is usually more of a pain for me than the original problem.
It could work like this:I tend to agree with you about not having folks post in red or orange text, but there's no realistic way to enforce that. More trouble than it's worth; better to do our best to make it obvious and let members be responsible for their own actions.