• RickRussell_CA
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    462 years ago

    “Decline in overall quality” is a subjective metric, though. Does defederation reduce participation? Certainly.

    But ya know, there’s a reason people defederate certain instances – usually because those instances have attracted people who are disruptive to discussion on other instances.

    It’s really been no problem at all for me to keep a foot in lemmy.world, kbin.social, lemmy.ml, and beehaw.org. And a few other instances that appeal to more niche audiences.

    And if I really feel like discussion on an instance is offering something and I’m missing out, I can always get an account there.

    Not that I’m arguing against better moderation tools, of course. By all means, lemmy devs should prioritize those as soon as scaling/stability issues are dealt with.

    • Scew
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      -172 years ago

      Yep, when I get sick of the rhetoric here I just jump over to hexbear where they make fun of the people I tend to disagree with frequently here. . I think the best moderation tools would be to attempt to decentralize it so the petty tyrants the role seems to attract can’t abuse their authority to censor opinions they don’t agree with regardless of whether or not the content actually conflicts with the rules.

      • Ech
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        72 years ago

        Sounds like you’d like it better over there full-time.

        • RickRussell_CA
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          72 years ago

          Or… just let people live with their multiple personalities. It’s not like people didn’t have alt accounts on Reddit specifically so they could talk about stuff in a way that wouldn’t reflect on their primary account.

          As long as people behave appropriately on an instance, it’s nobody else’s business what they do on other instances with different accounts.

          • Ech
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            -22 years ago

            I never said they couldn’t? Just making an observation about what their declared preferences suggest.

            Also, they’re the ones advocating for all-inclusive access. Personally I think everything works well enough as-is. If a user gets annoyed or tired of an instance, they can quite easily hop to another. No need to restrict the abilities of admins just because wants to browse chapotraphouse on their main.

            • RickRussell_CA
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              52 years ago

              you’d like it better over there full-time

              The passive-aggressive version of “don’t let the door hit your ass on the way out”.

              • Ech
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                -32 years ago

                And? That’s still not saying anything about people with more than one account.

        • Scew
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          12 years ago

          What chain of logic lead you to that conclusion?

          • Scew
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            12 years ago

            He would have never guessed that I was at lemmy.world first. lol, probably would have broke his brainwashing to acknowledge another user as a human being he would have to consider the opinion of. Just pretend everyone’s out to get you for reasons other people made up for you. Back to sleep little one.

  • @Bodongs@lemmy.world
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    342 years ago

    I’m an example of a filthy casual reddit user who is really struggling to find value in lemmy. Finding an instance where local is of value is difficult, world may as well be “everything”, and “everything” is a nightmarish hodgepodge of memes for teenagers, furry porn, really niche technical discussions, and star Trek memes. I never stay in the app longer than a few minutes and I feel like I spend more time blocking weird porn communities than I do reading interesting articles.

    The other major issue is having to sort through the exact same article 60 times because people cross post not only to local communities but then also the same communities are duplicated on every instance. I’m probably going to abandon this soon unless I can find some kind of curated community list to subscribe to or something.

  • Virtual Insanity
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    152 years ago

    The biggest thing killing Lemmy for me is needing a seperate account on every single instance if I want to participate in anything on an instance.

    I thought this wasn’t how it was supposed to work.

    I saw this post on another instance and tried to reply this exact message but got an error saying I couldn’t.

    Using Liftoff if it matters.

    • @vind@lemmy.world
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      122 years ago

      That’s odd, you shouldn’t need another account. I’ve even made posts from this account to another instance

    • @CoderKat@lemm.ee
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      52 years ago

      You definitely don’t need accounts for every instances (as long as you’re not defederated). That sounds like an app bug or something.

    • SeaJ
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      22 years ago

      I don’t seem to have that issue using Jerboa. I am on Lemm.ee and have no issues commenting on Lemmy.world, lemmy.ml, etc posts. The only case where I could see not being able to is if there was defederation which the admin of lemm.ee does not want to do, even with the genocide deniers of hexbear.

    • @Meowoem@sh.itjust.works
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      12 years ago

      Also it can be really hard finding small communities from a different instance, a lot don’t show up or aren’t fully synced so some of the posts don’t show.

      Hopefully this is going to be fixed but I think it’s limiting the growth of more niche communities.

    • @blue_berry@lemmy.worldOP
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      42 years ago

      But you NEED a functioning feed to discover new stuff ACROSS the threadiverse. How else will you be able to find other communities?

      • @LibertyLizard@slrpnk.net
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        2 years ago

        Search, people link to them, looking at community lists on interesting instances, etc. Honestly browsing by all as it currently exists is one of the worst ways to find new communities. Maybe that could be improved but that’s where it stands today.

        • Spzi
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          32 years ago

          This, and via crossposting. I discovered a couple of interesting communities because someone cross-posted stuff I was interested in to those communities. Likewise, I try to cross-post my own post to some popular communities, and niche communities to give them more visibility.

      • @blue_berry@lemmy.worldOP
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        12 years ago

        Why are people wondering that lemmy.world gets bigger and bigger if everone is told to stay on their local/subscribed feed

  • Margot Robbie
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    92 years ago

    I respectfully disagree. On our LW Android comm, the discussion quality is generally pretty good, except when a post get on the front page, then the quality just drops like a rock.

    Smaller (but not too small) crowd usually lead to higher quality discussions, that’s true on reddit(default subreddits are pretty much all terrible) , and that’s true here as well. (the turning point for quality decline reddit is at about 20K subscribers). So, I don’t think the "instance protectionism lead to lower discussion quality is true at all.)

    Also, I think the mod tools here is basic but perfectly adequate. You can check our community’s mod log to see how much post removal/bans we actually had to do, and it’s not a lot. Also not to brag, but I think our weekly discussions are some of the best threads on Lemmy right now.

    It’s not hard, I just tell our comm’s users that I expect them to act like adults, and most of them act like adults, and we just remove the post of the few who refuses to do so (they are like in the single digits over the last months) and our admins usually handle the trolls that requires site wide bans in literal minutes here.

    I don’t use bots to mod and still do not see the need for it, because it turns out that if you cultivate a good culture in your community, moderation is pretty easy. That’s just my experience here though.

  • @Buffalox@lemmy.world
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    32 years ago

    If this is true, it may also cause users on smaller instances to migrate to bigger instances, because there is more activity. Undermining the power and freedom of the decentralized structure of Lemmy and the fediverse.

  • @DisappointingIntro@lemmy.world
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    32 years ago

    If its possible to create your own instance and federate with any instance of your choice - are there any apps which include the ability to register your own instance with you as the sole user? Maybe I’m misunderstanding the underlying logic

  • @ryathal@sh.itjust.works
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    32 years ago

    Instances shouldn’t be first class citizens, they should be more invisible to the users. The fediverse should be more like a cloud. Communities should be the primary focus, and only allow Instances to control how many users/communities they are the primary/secondary source for.

    • Kichae
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      2 years ago

      Disagree. Indeed, I couldn’t disagree more strongly.

      Instances are not just abstract server nodes in some overly wasteful recreation of some other website. This is the world wide social web as it should have been.

      You may as well argue that websites should be indistinguishable from each other.

      This isn’t Reddit. Full stop. And it’s not a drop-in Reddit replacement, either. It’s not “Reddit, but different”. It’s a whole new paradigm in forums and content aggregation. It’s very different from centralized social media, and we need to stop dancing around or trying to hide that fact.

      It will never get to reach its potential if we decide it needs to be nothing more than a simulacra of what came before it.

      • lalo
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        72 years ago

        Sorry to burst your bubble, but there already exists a proposal to make communities work more like a cloud.

        It’s just a matter of time before Lemmy and Kbin implement this.

        • FaceDeer
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          12 years ago

          It’s a proposal, not a certainty. There’ve been a bunch of proposals for ways to allow people to aggregate communities from multiple instances together and it’ll be a handy tool to have, but it doesn’t change the fundamental properties of the Fediverse. It just makes it more convenient to use it in various different ways.

      • snooggums
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        22 years ago

        Websites are indistinguishable from each other except for their content.

        Federated instances can be like web service providers, only limiting malicious content from users. The magazines/communities are like web sites on a particular host, such as WordPress. They control the content within their scope.

        What you are suggesting is that instances should be like AOL, curating the experience. Which is fine if some of them want to do that, but it shouldn’t be the standard.

        • FaceDeer
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          12 years ago

          What he’s suggesting is that instances can be like AOL. Not that they have to be. Each instance can present whatever sort of interface to the fediverse that it wants, and people can pick and choose which one they like.

        • @ttmrichter@lemmy.world
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          12 years ago

          Websites are indistinguishable from each other except for their content.

          Newspapers are indistinguishable from each other except for their content.

          Books are indistinguishable from each other except for their content.

          Movies are indistinguishable from each other except for their content.

          Yep, it’s just as vapid no matter what media you plug in there.

      • @ryathal@sh.itjust.works
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        -12 years ago

        To use a somewhat stretched analogy. Instances should be like bitcoin miners, I don’t need to know much about them individually at all. My only concern is that there isn’t a majority miner/instance.

        It doesn’t have to be a reddit clone, but the federation needs to move to a more mandatory model, and one that puts the content first. The current system is far too user hostile to allow anything but the lowest common denominator of communities.

  • Izzy
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    22 years ago

    What kind of moderation tools could help with this?

    • @NightAuthor@lemmy.world
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      42 years ago

      I don’t believe there is any type of auto moderator, though that’s possibly being supplemented by external bots.

      I forget where I read it, but I believe the biggest issue is with the implementation of current mod tools and how they don’t properly propagate through the fediverse.

      But again, I don’t recall the details.

        • @thisisawayoflife@lemmy.world
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          12 years ago

          Sure, but it usually takes some time to get proficient in a language. I’ve been an enterprise Java engineer for a decade and things have changed pretty dramatically in that time. Picking up a language like Rust takes time, understanding the available frameworks and what they provide takes time, understanding why there isn’t published code coverage metrics takes time, understanding why commits get merged when the pipeline is broken (or the commit broke the build) takes time, etc.

          It’s important, if one plans on creating a project that is maintainable by people other than yourself, to think things through and make sure the actual infrastructure exists and is stable and documented before opening it up to the world - and hold steadfast to those processes. When I read a PR that has the comment “the code works, now I just have to work on some tests”, I start to cringe knowing that testing is usually an afterthought with that developer rather than the place where the change should have started. As I look at the code in GitHub, the last commit to main didn’t even build. How was it even allowed to merge of it failed in the PR? Or do the pipelines just break randomly?

          Maybe I’m just really picky because I take pride in the maintainability of my professional (and personal) projects. After seeing where we were 5-6 years ago - with commented out code and tests, tests that made no sense, lack of code or branch coverage, non-existent validation phases, etc - it’s a no brainer that I would never want to go back to that.

          • FaceDeer
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            22 years ago

            As a dev myself, I fully agree.

            But that also illustrates why simply demanding that the existing devs should prioritize your personal needs over whatever it is they’re working on is kind of a non-starter. If it’s too hard for you to become a dev on the project but they’ve put in the effort to do so, they get to use that hard-won ability however they see fit.

            Is there some sort of bug bounty or feature bounty program for Lemmy or kbin? That might be a way that a non-dev could get their own needs prioritized, perhaps.

            • @wiki_me@lemmy.ml
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              12 years ago

              Is there some sort of bug bounty or feature bounty program for Lemmy or kbin? That might be a way that a non-dev could get their own needs prioritized, perhaps.

              You can just use a bounty hunting site, I like rysolv (open source and under the AGPL)

  • @blue_berry@lemmy.worldOP
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    2 years ago

    What I think could help against instance protectionism:

    A.) Better moderation tools to protect against SPAM and trash

    B.) Better curation algorithm, especially for smaller instances, to smartly curate posts that are relevant to the user

    C.) Better default-values for the selected feed (All instead of local), as well as for the discovery of communities (which is also currently local by default)

    If B is not realized, smaller instances will have no handle against big instances flooding their user’s feeds with their posts and they will switch back to local-default again.

    Overall, it can be brought down to making the All-feed more attractive. In my opinion, there should only be the subscribed-feed and an all-feed with curated posts (with different sorting algorithms to chose from in the best case). Or at least these should be the main ones.

    • kubica
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      22 years ago

      I was going to say that B might not be so easy. But maybe some kind customization on the ratio of local vs external posts on some of the top posts lists. Just a random idea.

    • poVoq
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      22 years ago

      All these issues only apply to large generalized instances like lemmy.world and not smaller instances where the local feed is the curated high quality feed.

      It would be IMHO better to remove the all feed and in general get away from large generalized instances that are harmful to the federation.

      • @blue_berry@lemmy.worldOP
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        12 years ago

        But why? That goes against the whole idea of federation. If no one uses the All feed you never discover other communities. You will end up with thousands of independent reddit clones.

        • poVoq
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          12 years ago

          There are many better ways to discover new communities and the all feed causes a lot of moderation issues (basically as soon as a post has enough upvotes to show up near the top of the hot sorting on all, you see loads of low effort troll posts).

          But I wasn’t seriously suggesting to remove it, rather that the local feed is much more useful than the all feed (on thematic instances) and thus if any feed would be removed if should be the all feed first.

  • @TCB13@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    No. Moderation tools lead to instance protectionism, which leads to a decline in the overall discussion quality on Lemmy.