This has nothing to do with actor vs author stance, which describe different ways a player goes about making decisions for their PC. "Author stance" describes a player making decisions for their PC because of things the player cares about rather than things the PC cares about - such as, in this case, making sure the GM's adventure gets played.
There is no such definition. Stance is a way of describing player decision-making.
I made a post, not addressed to any particular poster, about the reference in the 2024 D&D rules to players making decisions from the point of view of the player - ie choosing to follow the GM's hook - rather than the point of view of the character; which is called "author stance" in a terminology that was introduced into this thread by another poster at [https://www.enworld.org/threads/ran...d-fans-is-exhausting.712674/post-9664372]post 7739[/url].
@AlViking asked what the point of my post was. I replied. Then AlViking replied in a rather dismissive way, when all I had done was answer the question asked. If someone doesn't care "how the Forge would define anything", then why ask me about my post which used the phrase "author stance"?
The Forge went belly-up what 20 years ago? And you still think it's relevant? People argued about the terms back then, it hasn't gotten any better. The quote was about mutual respect between player and DM and I disagree that it leads to any assumptions of stance. Or that stance means anything that anyone agrees upon. If you had a point you need to give more detail than a term last defined decades ago. When I asked for what you meant you just repeated what you had already stated which added no value to the conversation.
If you have anything to say other than some out-of-date definition that is almost impossible to find, let me know because I wasn't being dismissive, I did try to discuss the topic.