This is not a point of pride for the US: Within five years, 76.6% of American prisoners wind up arrested all over again.
Norway, on the other hand, rides its model of educating and rehabilitating criminals to a 20% recidivism rate.
When it comes to handling smaller acts of internet wrongdoing — think: the spam, harassment, and slurs that torment many cyber citizens — Discord is now aiming to be more like Norway.
The social chat platform is resetting the disciplinary system for its 150m+ monthly users, per Platformer, hoping a more forgiving, nuanced approach will foster a better internet.
… but how’s that going to work, you may wonder?
Driving Discord’s logic, according to Platformer: half of its users are between ages 13 and 24. The bet is that gently curtailing impulsive teen behavior, and replacing overly punitive action with improved education, will result in healthier long-term internet citizenship.
It’d be great if this works. This is ambitious, and as long as Discord can keep its users safe from the very worst offenses, it’s worth trying. But:
Bottom line: This is a nice idea. But the internet’s a tough place for nice ideas.