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My Love-Hate Relationship With Lemmy – Gavi's Blog

cross-posted from: https://literature.cafe/post/7623713

I made a blog post discussing my biggest issues with Lemmy and why I am kind of done with it as a software.

43 comments
  • I think y'all are expecting too much from 2-3 poorly funded developers who are being overwhelmed by hundreds of thousands of people who grew used to have a "free" product developed by a giant corporation who employs thousands of people and has revenue in the hundreds of millions.

    I also think that this constant chasing for the next Messiah is counterproductive. I wish the best of luck for the Sublinks developers, but I also wish they could find a way to work to grow the ecosystem as a whole instead of competing for such a small slice of the Internet.

    To put it all together: If the largest issue with Lemmy is tooling for moderation and proper instance management, I'd be more than willing to refocus my work on Fediverser into it. But I have to say that I can not put any more effort into it without getting proper compensation for anything. As much as I'm hopeful to see the Fediverse grow and for the downfall of Big Tech, I know that we will need more (a lot more) than just a handful of people working on this as side-job while thousands of other just keep watching and repeating "Are we there yet? Are we there yet?"

    • I also think that this constant chasing for the next Messiah is counterproductive.

      MariaDB is a successful MySQL fork. LibreOffice is a successful OpenOffice fork. Even within the Fediverse, Mbin emerged as an actively developed fork from Kbin.

      I wish the best of luck for the Sublinks developers, but I also wish they could find a way to work to grow the ecosystem as a whole instead of competing for such a small slice of the Internet.

      The choice of Rust limited the ability for people to contribute. If I had gotten a dollar every time I read "I would like to contribute to Lemmy, but I don't have time to learn Rust", I would get a beer to everyone in this thread.

      we will need more (a lot more) than just a handful of people working on this

      Definitely. Sublinks with Java, Mbin with PHP and Piefed with Python already make it easier for people to contribute to the whole ecosystem.

      Fediverser

      As a side-note, how is it going on that side? It's been a while since the last time I checked.

    • Reports are auto forwarded without any anonymity. And yes, report retaliation bans happen from community mods.

    Not just retaliation bans but also harassment and threats in DMs. Really community mods have no business being able to see who sends reports, only admins do, and even then, only admins on the homeserver of those reports, admins of remote instances should only get to know the instance it came from, nothing else.

    • Reports are sent to both admins and community mods, with no means of forwarding directly to admins. Community mods can snipe reports before admins see them.

    I've also experienced problems with this on more than one occasion, mods can essentially protect bad faith users and their community from having action taken due to policy violations by resolving all reports without action. I've gotten around this by DMing admins directly (on Lemmy.world it can also be done by emailing info@lemmy.world) but there should really be grandular options like on Mastodon, both for forwarding to community mods and also whether or not to forward to remote instances.

    • Domain blocks are always publicly visible.
    • Mod logs are always publicly visible in the public mod log.

    I disagree with this, transparency is important because without it, it enables abusive moderation practices which are much more difficult to uncover or find out about, also domain blocks should be visible because it allows people to know which servers are federated and thus which instance they should pick. Without transparency we get the incredibly user-hostile shadow moderation that places like Reddit are known for.

  • There is no granular federation options. Only domain blocks and that’s it.

    As it should be. The whole point is this is all supposed to mesh together seamlessly, and there needs to be a standard for what federating actually means.

    This isn't a lack of moderation tools. You have the moderation tools. You can moderate by defederating.

    What you want are curation tools, and that's against the spirit of this. It's not supposed to matter what instance you're on, you're supposed to see the same fediverse except for the case of defederation which should only be for extreme cases or hostile instances. This push for the ability to curate granularly is worrying, because it just comes off like admins not being willing to commit to the idea of this platform, but still wanting all the benefits of having other instance's content.

    Domain blocks are always publicly visible.

    Mod logs are always publicly visible in the public) mod log.

    Good. Users should know what the admin and mods are doing so they can make an informed choice about whether or not they want to remain on that instance.

    We should not be encouraging shadow moderation and invisible curation like this. This should be a place that works on transparency.

43 comments