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by scbrg 2245 days ago
> This inability seems the IT industry at it's worse. It's like some Frankenstein putting immutability onto human beings.

I don't understand. Communication has historically not been possible to "edit". There's nothing inhuman about that. If I say something, I've said it. Of course I can later make a correction, but the words I said remain said. The same has been true for the thousands of years we've had written communication, until a few years ago (on some platforms).

Personally, I find editing messages a misfeature. There's few things more annoying than replying to a message, and then finding out that the message you're replying to has been replaced by another one. If a platform has this feature, it makes me less likely to use it.

2 comments

While I do agree, I find that marking a message as 'edited' (like Telegram does) makes it less of a problem for me. Bonus points if I can click to see the original message!
No, we have always been able to edit communication until the internet, because conversations/everything has always been unrecorded or very hard to access the archives of.

Have you never had an argument get to 'you said this', 'no I did not' ? We even edit our own messaging in our heads.

We make mistakes, why can't we correct them?

(We are talking autocomplete of spelling and grammar here at the original level)

And since obviously your end can have a setting/hack/default to keep the original anyway I'm not sure what the fear is.

> No, we have always been able to edit communication until the internet, because conversations/everything has always been unrecorded or very hard to access the archives of.

Spoken, yes. Written, no. But sure, most communication is (and certainly was) spoken, I'll give you that.

> Have you never had an argument get to 'you said this', 'no I did not' ? We even edit our own messaging in our heads.

I'm afraid I have. They suck tremendously. Do you think these arguments are a good thing?

> We make mistakes, why can't we correct them?

We can. We post a correction. "Sorry, I meant to say this."

> (We are talking autocomplete of spelling and grammar here at the original level)

Unless you produce a magic AI that lets people fix only spelling mistakes and nothing else, we're not talking about just that.

> And since obviously your end can have a setting/hack/default to keep the original anyway I'm not sure what the fear is.

Most communication platforms these days are actually not controlled by the users, so no, I can't have a setting for it. And if I have a hack for it (which probably requires a tremendous amount of technical expertise, out of reach for most people), I'm almost certainly in violation of some EOL and may get banned. Heck, in some crazy jurisdictions I could even end up in trouble with the law.