Pretty much the title: I see multiple posts on 3-day old accounts, all promoting disinfo for the RUS, ISR, CHI or some weirdo faction thereof. CanI set a filter on my account to ignore these prolific bastards until they have attained certain age or number of responses that exceed the AI 's smarmy word count?
I could see that being a feature on some kind of Lemmy mobile client. Voyager for example shows how old an account is if it’s under a certain age. I think it might be a month. Maybe any post or comments that display this could be filtered from your feed.
Not sure though. I really don’t know how additional features like that idea I just mentioned are typically added to the desktop experience of an instance.
If 3PAs started doing that, the Lemmy devs would probably consider that “censorship” and remove the account age from the API calls. 🙄
Why would they go in that direction when they’ve been working towards better moderation tools?
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Reddit refugee here. Was karma (or its equivalent) ever built in for it to have been removed? I thought it was an active decision not to put it in in the first place. That’s a subtle but important difference IMO.
how annoying
Omg is that why I keep seeing comments with baby faces and a timer next to the username?
(I rotate through multiple iOS apps, as they all have major downsides, this week I’m on voyager)
That would be why
Well that’s fucking spiffy.
Thanks!
Sorry for being a new user I guess 🙄
Worst case is you’re essentially invisible for a week. I’ve had plenty of platforms have a waiting period to join so not a huge issue. Also easy for bots to bypass by making a bunch of accounts to sit on
I would definitely rather have that as an opt in system like NSFW content than Reddit’s cryptic karma requirements.
I want to see your comments, but not your posts until there’s some bare evidence you’re not a spammer.
Hah. Lemmyverse peoples are all about censorship. “How can I filter this” “How can I censor that” “Let’s defederate from this and that instance” Etc.
The whole point is that everyone can do their own censorship, instead of one person doing it for everyone.
Nobody wants to see everything.
I definitely agree on the first part. But: there’s enough ppl who want to see everything. And even if you don’t, a lot of ppl just subscribe to their favourite communities and that’s it. That’s totally fine.
I feel like that’s why people need to carefully pick the instance they call home. If you join a large enough instance there are likely going to be a lot of calls to filter out various things you might want.
Indeed! It’s almost like people got fed up of their internet experience being a flaming pile of garbage.
I gotta be honest, while the Lemmy experience is a bit better than Reddit in some ways, its also the same if not worse in other ways.
Instance admins and mods are not really any different from the ones on Reddit. They’re still not immune to power tripping, and I have had to leave some communities and an entire instance that was suffering from that.
Its the same flaming garbage everywhere you go, because the flaming garbage isnt the platform, its the people. Sure, one or two users or communities might be okay if theyre niche enough, but the amount of people and communities I have blocked or filtered on Lemmy is drastically higher than when I used Reddit. Sure, most of those are bots or almost exclusively political stuff, but the point remains that Lemmy puts a lot more work on the user to tailor their experience than Reddit does, and that can be a very bad experience for most people that just want to laugh at memes and cat pictures.
You’re on Lemmy.world, where my impression is that the threshold is pretty high before they defederate. If you want to be kind and see as little garbage as possible, you could for example join Beehaw, which has a focus on kindness. LGBTQ+ people who are particularly tired of bigots can join Blahaj, where the mods are very trigger happy about weeding out that kind of behaviour.
If you’re unhappy about every approach to moderation out there, you can start your own instance and do it yourself. Of course most people won’t, but it nevertheless renders them in less of a position to complain.
And yes, moderation cannot ever be perfect. It takes a lot for users to leave a community due to disagreeable moderation. But still, users here have a lot more choice.
Personally I’m testing a platform where problematic users (such as the one starting this comment thread) are marked with warning signs, so that I can identify likely trolls right away and alter my interaction with them. It’s pretty neat.
That platform you’re testing also has a little icon next to accounts that are less than a week old. ;-)
Indeed - I very recently noticed mine was finally gone. ;)
What platform are you testing?
He is on piefed.social. Still super feature incomplete, but I like where the creator is going.
Oh so it’s basically an alternate/addition to Lemmy/kbin?
Lemmy puts a lot more work on the user to tailor their experience than Reddit does, and that can be a very bad experience for most people that just want to laugh at memes
You’re right about this and I feel like I’m in the minority of people that are willing to spend a bit of time and effort to get something to work exactly how they want… similar to Windows/Linux
Instance admins and mods are not really any different from the ones on Reddit. They’re still not immune to power tripping, and I have had to leave some communities and an entire instance that was suffering from that.
Indeed, but the difference is the ability for a community to walk away to another instance. You see that regularly, and that’s a good thing
I agree with you, but you may have replied to the wrong comment.
I did, sorry about that!
It is certainly a minority. As a side note, most people these days prefer to buy a pre-built PC for more than deal with buying parts individually and assembling it themselves for significantly less money.
I know someone that decided they wanted to try buying parts and assembling a new PC for the first time ever, and when their motherboard arrived cracked they decided to return everything and buy another pre-built instead of just RMA’ing the motherboard. Cost difference of like $800USD for a worse machine because they didn’t have the patience to RMA a motherboard. Its literally so easy to assemble a computer, but because they didn’t get it exactly right on the first go they have given up on it and will never do it again.
What’s wrong with people? What happened?
Because the fediverse lets you control the content you federate with, it should be considered more of a choice than censorship… The problem is that some users think that their preference should also be applied to everyone else in the whole fediverse.
I imagine that will fade a lot when people start utilizing individual instance blocking with the newer (newest?) version of Lemmy
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I’m sure it could be implemented. It would be really cool to have a heavily configurable client with these sorts of niche features. I imagine nobody has done it yet though
A shared or importable block list would be nice.