"When Anu the Sublime, King of the Anunaki, and Bel, the lord of Heaven and earth, who decreed the fate of the land, assigned to Marduk, the over-ruling son of Ea, God of righteousness, dominion over earthly man..." (the Code of Hammurabi)
I have a lot of respect for Tim O'Reilly. He seems like a standup guy, and I think he wants what's best for everyone after the whole Kathy Sierra incident. But I'm going to have to agree with Mike Arrington, Dave Taylor, Tony Hung and others that Tim's proposed "code of conduct" for the blogosphere - which comes complete with either a cheesy sheriff's badge or a stick of dynamite icon for the sidebar of your blog - is a dumb idea. Well-meaning, but dumb.
Tim's post on the code is here, and there's a New York Times story on it here, which notes that Tim and Jimmy Wales have been working together to put the code together (if I were being mean, I would suggest that what Jimmy really needs is a better code for dealing with Wikipedia frauds like Essjay). And it is worthwhile remembering that Tim's code is a first draft. The code is to be developed through a wiki-style process.
My friend Rob Hyndman is right that the impulse for this code is a good one. We do need to take ownership of our communities, and how we behave in them, even if those communities are made up of a few blogs roped together by a common interest. And as Cynthia Brumfield notes at IPDemocracy, comparing a voluntary code of conduct with Iran - as the Scobleizer does - is really going over the top.
Tony says that all we need is a well-formed and clearly stated comment policy, and it's interesting that even the head of Waggener Erdstrom (Microsoft's PR agency) isn't in favour of the code.
I think part of what is appealing about the blogosphere (at least for me) is that it is still to some extent a Wild West-type frontier, - although the settlers and landowners are definitely moving in - and with that comes the risk of unpleasant behaviour. What happened to Kathy Sierra, and has happened to others, should not be tolerated. But I think codes of conduct should be a personal matter, rather than a quasi-legislated thing. Just my two cents.
blogs, code, conductlink to original post