Talked to Havvo. Am told I can repost my post sans about twelve words.
The amount of concerned replies here (in comparison to other issues) indicates that holding the conference in the summit channel was *not* a good idea.
This seems to be the crux of your point.
The trouble is, this doesn't do a terribly good job of reflecting things factually. There's seventy six replies including yours above, but what they maintain isn't based on their number; it's based on their content.
I've read them and spoken to the posters elsewhere in some cases. I'm going to break it down for you, here, because it seems you're reading a starkly different thread than I am.
People don't really like it when I do things like this, for some reason. It strikes them as unfair, as if I am cheating in presenting an argument by the numbers.
Here's a list of all the posters in the thread, broken into groups by opinions and positions they've espoused and arranged in their individual groups by order of appearance:
These are the people who, in the context of this thread alone, either supported the idea from the start or had their concerns addressed directly in a way they found satisfactory as far as I could surmise from their posts here and from ingame conversations:
1. Lillith
2. Izzy
3. Kaldor
4. Kaleigh
5. Saxon
6. lallara
7. Havvo
8. Ze'ev
9. Jules
10. Lou
11. Vieve
12. Tomahawk Bliss (whom I hesitate to mention as I expect that in doing so, I will have it turned against me by same.)
13. Hamish
These are people who are either on the fence about it/in a position of compromise or in disagreement with something other than anything I have presented, or fact, or haven't spoken up again in the course of the thread:
1. Arvo Katsuya (who was last heard seeking compromise)
2. Seriphyn (who specified nothing until I asked ingame, and I remember the answer was pretty middling in its relevance)
3. Svetlana Scarlet (who has a different conception of the channel and conference than I do, and this matters because my conception of the conference shapes the conference more directly than anyone else's)
These are people that are or were in firm disagreement at the time of their last post:
1. Casi (A self-admitted non-user of the channel in question)
2. Merdaneth (who is raising a point about the number of responses in the thread as his main argument, and not about sentiments expressed)
3. The Cosmopolite (someone I certainly haven't seen using the channel heavily, for at least two years)
4 Silver
You want me to not do something because a few people, so far, have come to me to express some irritation, which in many cases was their first response and not their last?
Really?
I don't buy that irritating a couple of people for ten minutes by having someone else fuck something up or misrepresent me is a sinker for this train of thought.
I also don't buy that three to six people's objections over something should stop me pleasing a group ten to twenty times their size - ten beforehand, I might add - for the sake of not mildly irritating three to six people, for the same reason I don't buy not telling you out of character that your playstyle needs to go or your roleplay is wrong - or listen to people that tell ME that.
'Cause what it's all coming across as, chiefly, is 'your perception of the purpose and function of this chunk of the setting we share is wrong! And you need positively everyone's permission to impact it to any extent.'
To which I can only say, really? Why? Why isn't it enough to let dozens of people have a party in the community pool on tuesdays if you get it back to normal the day after? The hard rules of the community let them do it - is it really their responsibility to go knocking on every door and gaining permission?
I don't really think it is.
And yet, we did manage to come to an interesting point.
I think it would be more useful in this particular case to stop analysing this thing, just try it in a separate channel next time, then evaluate both ways and come to a conclusion.
See, this says something about the chain of events people are forseeing.
People seem to see it like this.
Use of the summit for events -> permanent impact on the function of the channel when not in use for events -> erosion of communal assurances of certain channel functions being available -> less use of channel for certain setting-relevant conditions dependent, in their view, on prior functions -> death of channel from mismanagement.
I take issue with several portions of thought structure.
Use of the summit for events -> permanent impact on the function of the channel when not in use for events - if we were to have events in the summit every day of the year, robbing it of it's dependable default function as, essentially, a communications node, that'd be one thing. However, I'm responding to a very specific developer event - one that unifies the entire capsuleer community against another type of transhuman character archetype.
Permanent impact on the function of the channel when not in use for events -> erosion of communal assurances of certain channel functions being available - This is to say, if I EVER have one event in the Summit that involves strong sentiment against a specific faction, it is permanently marred by that.
Which is to say that something can never be recognized as distinct from its history; what the summit is after these events will somehow not impact its image or use at that time more than its having hosted this conference, or at least not sufficiently to maintain its capacity to fill its niche of neutrality. In light of the enemy faction's pilots being able to say 'we were able to speak unimpeded there - unless we were disruptive - while in the MIDDLE of an enemy conference set against us' affects that. And if they won't say it, we'll all say it for us - all two hundred of us.
Erosion of communal assurances of certain channel functions being available -> less use of channel for certain setting-relevant conditions dependent, in their view, on prior functions -> death of channel from mismanagement - Basically, this suggests that nobody will change strategy if things actually worsen over time, and that things will worsen over time because of a perceived alteration.
I find that the sort of character who would fail to reassess current events constantly and change their behavior as such a reassessment prompted laughably unsuitable for a 'general roleplay' setting. So when we switch back to good ol' business as usual mode and are plainly still neutral to everyone,
as we largely have been throughout the conference, yeah, no.
MY line of thinking, on the other hand, is:
Use of summit for events -> leveraging of holistic resources (event draw of roleplayers, news article) to bring more people into the channel that are interested in roleplay -> having exposure for the summit as a general roleplay channel drastically increase because so many more people have it in their channels lists or have heard of it as a roleplay channel of some sort -> later use of channel by more players -> promotion of channel, growth of community.