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I would appreciate translation of this answer.


I think @gbianchi’s answer covers the question perfectly. I just would like to add a few extra thoughts to it.

Chat room is a public place

Though one might see a chat room like a walk with a friend in an almost empty park, it is more like to talk to someone in another part of an overcrowded bus. That means even if one talks to a friend in a chat room, everyone still hears the conversation and might not like what they said or took it differently.

All moderators and 10k users see a flag

Stack Exchange is a huge network with 175 communities, hundreds of moderators and plenty of 10k users. All of them who are using the chat system in the moment see a flag! That a lot of folks. The system is designed in this way to make flags handled as fast as possible.

Users who handle flags do care about the context

Based on what I have seen users do a great job reviewing flags. They usually read enough of a conversation to understand the context and validate or invalidate a flag correctly.

Of course, international sites kinda special...

Users use translation tools for understanding content on international sites

Though machine translation technologies are not that great nowadays but still are able to help get the sense of a phrase. I have not seen regular words get translated into vulgar ones very often. As a result, I tend to think (as many others) that if one uses a phrase that does not look nice after translation, probably the phrase does not seem to be nice before translation as well (otherwise nobody would use machine translators at all!)

If you think that you have been misinterpreted, please do not hesitate to contact the mod team or a CM. We are more than happy to help you!

Polite public places can be fun places

When someone asks me about a level of politeness that we want to maintain on our sites I answer the following:

  1. On the site we expect one to behave like they would if it was a lecture at a university and they were asking a professor something or answering the professor’s question in the crowded room.
  2. In the chat we expect one to behave like they would if they lingered after the lecture and talking informally to the professor and their fellows on abstract topics (still in the university room).

I have been part of many such conversations both during a lecture and after it. There were a lot of positive jokes and anecdotical stories. It was fun and as a result, I wanted to talk to professors and peers again and again.

I do believe that we can express ourselves using words that are not required the context to understand if they are polite or not, words that are inclusive and do not offend anyone, words that make us closer to one another. Let us use such a language.