In the context of a forum, posts are more like typed out conversation. If you expect a response to something you write/say then you are effectively conversing with other thread participants. Since a forum also amounts to a record of those conversations, then those conversations "belong" to the forum - as it exists as an interactive community. What one participant says effects those reading and responding, as well as those who may only be reading/observing/listening.
As such, one participant's "product" attaches itself to the dynamic of the community (back and forth) conversation. As such a community activity, can a developing thread be dissected into each participant's individual comments? Given the (greater or absolute?) freedom for that to take place (on the prerogative of one or more individual participants) and the "record" of the community conversation can/may/will fall apart. I've seen threads on MANY other forums where a participant highly modified or erased the text from their post. The result almost always results in indecipherable replies to an evaporated, no longer existent comment. The community conversation is dismantled by one participant.
Given the above, I don't think that how this forum is operated in any true way involves an authoritarian type situation. I feel that the way Bob moderates things (very minimally) is much better than MANY other hang gliding forum web sites. I also see the limited ability for members to alter/edit their posts as a way to make the "Community" more truthful and/or authentic. In saying that, I don't mean to imply that editing a post makes that author a liar. It's just that unedited posts remain truer to the original dynamic/flow of the conversation.
In addition, a forum style web site is not meant as a stage for separate, individual monologs or essays. But considering that context, certainly the author has every right to edit/modify what they create. However, professional writers know that you don't go around repeatedly editing your works once they are published. Were that to be the case, then the idea/concept presented by the author begins to lose its stability. Get it right before you publish - or don't publish.
I would favor the ability to attach comments and/or corrections related to one of your own posts via some form of hyperlink. If readers wanted to read these they could click on the link.
I'm also not sure I get the connection between being able to edit/delete your posts hours/days/months or years(?) later as ever having caused me to leave (or not begin participation in) a forum. And since the moderator here (Bob) will "fix" a number of minor errors (after the edit window closes) I don't see a big problem with how things are done here.
RickMasters wrote:I don't know why we can't edit our own posts...
It's an authoritarian measure at odds with the principles of democracy. What I write is my product. It is my right to change or remove what I write. Period. Such a policy relays a poor level of respect from the operator. The inability to correct errors tends to limit one's enthusiasm and/or participation if one has high standards regarding communication.Second, it's consistent with the spoken word
Speaking is consistent with the spoken word. Writing is consistent with the written word.person "A" changes what they wrote, then person B's response may appear out of context
This is a "problem?" This is a problem more important than the resulting lack of participation? No. I would describe it as an imaginary problem used for the purpose of rationalizing an inadequate forum structure that impedes complex responses.