> If the added benefit of causing people more inconvenience is that they push for problems to be fixed, I don’t think it’s fair to cause that inconvenience with the intent of using that to solve the problem. I think it’s a manipulative tactic. That is my idea of what “punishment” we’re talking about.
We are talking about the same punishment.
If fixing the pages would reduce the amount of times people would have to manually fix page encodings locally, just working around the problem leaves the punishment in place for more people.
You express that you are being manipulated to prompt webmasters to solve the underlying problem, even though many more people would benefit from not having to manually work around it.
The thing is that I do not agree with you that the ends justify the means. You seem to think that people seeing fewer pages in the wrong encoding in the long run justifies making the problem worse when it does happen. I do not.
And again, I will reiterate that this does not solve that problem anyway because vast swaths of the web are static content that was put there and never touched again, so no one will fix it. Unless we want everything to live on content farms, it is essential to be able to access content like this. You are viewing the web as something that is actively maintained, similar to a software project. That is true for a certain category of website, such as the one that we are on right now. It is not true for the kind of website which is most likely to have borked text encoding.
We are talking about the same punishment.
If fixing the pages would reduce the amount of times people would have to manually fix page encodings locally, just working around the problem leaves the punishment in place for more people.
You express that you are being manipulated to prompt webmasters to solve the underlying problem, even though many more people would benefit from not having to manually work around it.