Julia
In Memoriam
- Joined
- 10 May 2005
- Posts
- 16,986
- Reactions
- 1,973
That's a good point. Also some of us in retirement are no longer actively looking for growth but do need cash flow via the dividends and franking credits.It is true that the stock areas on ASF are barely ticking over. My thoughts are that in fact the speculative and general industrial/retail stock index is just falling away to dust overall. In the current market investors seem to be on a hiding to nothing if they invest outside the 4 banks, Telstra and a few others.
There seems to be little point in trying to do analysis on these core shares. They seem to have a life of their own dominated by safety first principles of funds and SMSF investors.
Yes, pretty much exactly my position.You can't really blame him. Some of the rubbish that is posted about Muslims belongs on some neo-Nazi forum. I steer clear of General Chat these days largely because reading the bile that often passes for discourse get utterly boring. Yes, there are people who have interesting perspectives who post there but it's basically four or five posters -- who rarely, if ever post anywhere on the stock/investing forums -- going at eachother. I've noticed the rest of the forum has really dried up, which could be because of the time of year but could also be because, like your almost "new friend", new members arrive and the first thing they encounter on a stock forum is a thread about whether Islam is evil or not.
The forum is becoming a place for a very small number of people who want to discuss politics and religion, and honestly I find myself visiting less and less.
You do indeed. Nulla Nulla and Rimtas and others also consistently put up charts with informative accompanying comments.I post up a heap of stuff which can take a heap of time and the
interaction is ---well frankly not worth the time and effort.
….. members want to be able to have off topic discussions and unfortunately it seems to bring out the worst in people. If you take the off topic discussions away then inevitably you will lose members.
... Which is worse, verbal rioting in cyberspace or physical rioting on the streets?
Neither is necessary!:
People don't get offended by tents or rockets but they sure do when it comes to religion and race.
I have to agree with Mc lovin and Craft.
Both are serious Stock enthusiasts.
Aussi stock forum should be just that.
I wont post on general chat. Hot air is of no value. Opinions are like armpits we all have one.
Ill keep mine to myself---except on this occasion!
But generation of volume dictates a general section.
It also dictates some of the moderation often let go far to long
not wanting to squash free speech.
But is this really a stock/trading forum.
I post up a heap of stuff which can take a heap of time and the
interaction is ---well frankly not worth the time and effort.
THATS WHY I STOP MID WAY WITH A LOT OF CONTENT.
Who's serious about what they do and are capable of interacting
infact can they???
People who have a lot to offer are either leaving or choosing to post less
I understand they cant be bothered.
Business or content?
I think that if you don't take care of content eventually you wont have a business---of any standing.
Harsh but true.
I even offered to take sometime and give you some suggestions privately---no comment---so why bother.
There are some capable people on this site and many who have left---on a regular basis.
Complete re think I think!
...psychologists say specific features of online interaction work against civility and we are simply incapable of co-operating online without the firm hand of an invisible army of moderators.
and of courseOnline communities can emerge from the grassroots or they can – and this is much harder to authentically pull off – be founded by companies. Those that have triumphed with this in Australia include Bunnings with its DIY Workshop forum, and Woolworths with Bunch, a “gated” online community of 60,000 members with a waiting list of 48,000 (members get free Woolworths-brand products to review, but also share recipes and general life discussion
most online communities live in Facebook under its “Groups” product, as the Facebook people call it. This function allows people to join discrete interest groups, which can be private or public (of Facebook’s 2.5 billion members worldwide, 1.4 billion use Groups.
...[there can be] constant micro aggressions, snide comments, racism and sexism.
People can be awful online, says Beckett, because the internet is “low context”, meaning we miss buckets of information when we interact there.
Body language is a key one: the bow of a head, the furrow of a brow, that wounded look in someone’s eyes that reminds us of their humanity (studies suggest a lack of eye contact is a more potent driver of hostility than being anonymous and invisible).
"Tone of voice is missing, too: there’s still no sarcasm font. If we’re having a fight in a restaurant, there will be bystanders who might shoot us a disapproving look; under the so-called “bystander effect”, we’re tempered by the presence of others.
Yet online, bolstered sometimes by anonymity, we forget people may be watching. And sometimes the bystanders are reluctant to step up when everyone seems quick to cut down"
Some moderators and administrators are paid. Most are not. A survey by the Australian Community Managers industry group – most of whose members are paid professionals – last year found 71 per cent were female and 68 per cent Millennials. They were well educated, with 82 per cent holding graduate-level qualifications, yet 40 per cent earned below the national average. Online toxicity was their most common complaint. The prevailing culture in Australia was, one surveyed manager commented, treating strangers on the internet as less than human. “I’d love to see a bit more empathy.”Psychologists call this the online disinhibition effect. It can have a positive impact. If you’re anonymous and lacking in self-restraint, sharing your innermost secrets online will quickly cement intimate bonds. But the flip side – toxic online disinhibition – is the social poison seen not only in trolling, but leaching through online communities.
Hi Joeit's a stock market forum and you and a very small handful of others have been undermining ASF for a long time.
Hi Joe
I will put my hand up as being part of the "small handful".
Would you mind expanding on your statement that we are undermining ASF.
Sounds like you're gonna blow up General Chat Joe ?
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