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SysAdmin

A chimpanzee and two trainees in a trench coat

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Comments
17
Joined
2 yr. ago
  • You've taken my words and twisted their meaning to create an antisocial strawman to attack. I will not engage.

    That said: if you are someone who views the power instance administrators have over their instances to be "tyrannical", then ActivityPub —a protocol which by design decentralizes power away from a CEO and into the diverse hands of instance owners— is probably not the protocol for the sort of platform you're looking for.

  • Allowing Lemmygrad to have it's own "books" community looks like a feature to me, not a problem. The terminally online tend to overpower any other conversation. IMO, we should work to preserve a diversity of perspectives. If all discussions are forced to be centralized we've just recreated Reddit with extra steps.

  • I am with you as a user, but also an instance administrator. Forcing our hosted communities together with federated communities would take away nearly all motivation I have to host an instance in the first place.

  • The users who post in the "one big community" are the users who want their posts to get the most views. Personally speaking, I generally do not want to be a part of a community full of those kind of people (with the exception of if I have a tech support question or similar).

    Not everyone wants to be in the most popular space, this "feature" essentially forces everyone together. I believe the social web thrives with a diversity of approaches to community structure.

  • Allowing /c/anti_thing to direct all of their users to posts in /c/thing is a bad idea.

    Personally I have never viewed the "separation problem" as a problem, but the single largest benefit of federation/decentralization.

  • Hi, one of startrek.website's admins here:

    If I'm understanding this "feature" correctly, it feels antithetical to what I view as a fundamental aspect of the fediverse, which is diversity of moderation via decentralization. We came to the fediverse with the explicit purpose of escaping the tyranny of the majority that Reddit forces upon mod teams. This feels like a large step on the path to remaking reddit "with extra steps" and would probably be a deal breaker (for me personally at least).

    I think a better way to implement a similar feature, is to give mods an ability to "boost" posts into their communities (with consent from the other mod team to prevent brigading). That maintains the separation while still allowing mods to make exceptions and consolidate comment threads where they deem appropriate.

  • How much effort would it be for them to create a new one and do it again?

    Minimal, but it is the domain that gets blocked so the attacker would still need to purchase a new domain.

  • Would you like the admins to permaban them?

  • Oh, my bad! Also congratulations.

  • One of our Admins still moderates their Reddit community, but we are also in regular contact with the other mods who chose to stay behind.

  • StarTrek.website typically sees 1-2 (approved) registrations per day. We have 12 approved in the past 48 hours.

  • We're not opposed to hosting non-Star Trek communities as long as they adhere to instance guidelines, but before you move you should know that the federation gap with .world is closing and should be finally caught up before the end of the week.

  • Time for startrek.website/c/theymightbegiants?

  • Startrek.website has banned the user and blocked/purged the communities.

  • StarTrek.website saw 4 approved registrations in the past day, and we typically get about 1/day too.