this post was submitted on 03 Dec 2025
656 points (94.3% liked)
Fediverse memes
2293 readers
1279 users here now
Memes about the Fediverse.
Rules
General
- Be respectful
- Post on topic
- No bigotry or hate speech
- Memes should not be personal attacks towards other users
Specific
- We are not YPTB. If you have a problem with the way an instance or community is run, then take it up over at !yepowertrippinbastards@lemmy.dbzer0.com.
- Addendum: Yes we know that you think ml/hexbear/grad are tankies and or .world are a bunch of liberals but it gets old quickly. Try and come up with new material.
Elsewhere in the Fediverse
Other relevant communities:
- !fediverse@lemmy.world
- !yepowertrippinbastards@lemmy.dbzer0.com
- !lemmydrama@lemmy.world
- !fediverselore@lemmy.ca
- !bestofthefediverse@lemmy.ca
- !fedigrow@lemmy.zip
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
I doubt that a normal user would get themselves flagged with the low rep icon though. Even receiving twice as many, triple as many, quadruple or quintuple as many downvotes as upvotes would not do it. To receive ten times as many downvotes as upvotes is someone who is entirely ignoring the consent of users to have to read their ~~crap~~ ahem "offered opinions". That is Reddit-level hostility there, and something that your average conscientious Threadiverse participant will never experience - except unfortunately on the receiving end, as some very few people seem to take great pleasure in absolutely flaunting the rules in every community that they visit.
It would also take a MASSIVE vote-altering campaign to counteract that effect. Something which if only due to its sheer scale might be noticed. And at that point it would be easier to create a new Lemmy account - some instances require nothing to make that happen - or even spin up a new instance in order to skirt the effects of downvoting.
In short, reputation is a part of the normal human set of interactions. PieFed acknowledges that and exceedingly gently places an icon next to the usernames of the most egregious offenders. I for one do not think that is a bad thing, even on purely theoretical grounds. We aren't trying to recreate a new 4chan here (we already have Hexbear for that - seriously! ๐)
Skavau already covered the point about lemmy.ml being authoritative whereas Lemmy.today is not (in general there are 4 well-known tankie authoritarian instances and Lemmy.today is not one of those:-).
Which one is 4th?
Midwest.social - the admin Seahorse famously banning people for downvoting them. Yeah definitely less well-known than the usual 3.
That was a one time occurrence, the admin apologized, reverted the decision, and I haven't heard of any similar incident since then.
I definitely recall multiple posts about that instance (and Seahorse in particular) in !yepowertrippinbastards@lemmy.dbzer0.com. One example is the downvoting one (https://lemmy.world/post/18414833), another even more authoritarian example is https://lemmy.cafe/post/10511187 where Seahorse banned the person who reported a comment calling for violence, stating "someone please kill [this person]" - mind you, he did not ban the person making that comment, but the person who REPORTED it. Making reports is apparently a bannable offense, mind you with no text in the sidebar stating that, and subsequent apologies to the admin going un-responded to (according to that post).
I remember the second one with the libbity lib lib
The first one seems someone throwing a fit. I've had it worst on other instances, I don't equal them with the three ones.
2 posts seem light to put them to the same level as the three others
the ever-expanding definition of "tankie" strikes again!
'grad, .ml, and hexbear. What's the fourth?
... Surely not db0?
Edit: Apparently, this comment never showed up on piefed.social, so I'll probably never get a reply.
I see it from Piefed.zip
Good thing I'm friends with everyone. Maybe the maga instance? I've heard people call beehaw and blahaj authoritarian, strangely.
You can make an alt on some other instance that is federated with piefed.social and ask again with that one! :)
It's anyway useful to have alts.
๐ณ
(Just search for Tuuktuuk... I might have slightly been searching for the optimal instance for my use ๐คฃ...but then again, I have actually had actual occassinal need for four of my alts! The other PieFed one when this one has been down, the Lemmy one for seeing how things look when viewed from Lemmy, Mastodon for viewing microblog posts, Friendica for writing longer microblog posts and boosting them with my main Mastodon account, mbin is sometimes useful when I want to share posts and comments between Mastodon and PieFed/Lemmy.)
Lemmy.ml is federated with piefed.social, Diva's comments can be seen: https://piefed.social/post/1533603#comment_9110585
So I don't know why my comment can't be, I'm not banned on there as far as I can see.
Also this is my "federation" alt.
Edit: My other comment in this post shows up: https://piefed.social/u/edie@lemmy.ml
I was responding to this comment:
I'm aware of the weirder instances. I was saying Lemmy itself isn't authoritative.
I'm not opposed to the reputation thing because I think manipulation will end in false positives, but because there are better systems to moderate users than popularity. Without knowing the details of it, seems like a straight ratio would disproportionately affect people who don't post as often. Some people have like 30 comments over a year, most with two or three votes. At that point it just takes one or two really unpopular opinions to shift that ratio drastically. But I donno, maybe there's a threshold.
Even so, right now I don't mind leaving my more unpopular comments up because the fruitcake of conversation is better with a few odd chunks, and it doesn't affect anything. The threat of a reputation label, no matter how unlikely it is to get one, is an incentive to please the crowd, and I think making votes mean anything was part of the problem with reddit. I don't want anything to get in the way of a passionate user and their rant, I'm here for the crazy.
Plus, In moderating my community I found a few people who just straight downvote everything. One of the accounts I checked had hundreds of hours of downvoting, like an insane amount of clicking arrows. Tens of thousands of downvotes. I don't want any kind of system someone like that can influence.
Regardless, I respect your argument and your points are valid. We might have to agree to disagree, and maybe I'll see you on piefed soon, despite my criticisms.
Originally I meant that the Lemmy ecosystem is generally speaking more authoritarian than the PieFed one. This is in large part due to the preferences of the devs.
I will now also add the new related point that I think the coding design of Lemmy lends itself more to authoritarian control. It seems geared and marketed more towards instance admins, then mods, then users only last. Tbf PieFed is the same way here, but with a different focus due to the preferences of the main designer.
Lemmy is even more authoritarian than Reddit itself in many ways: Reddit at least sends a user a notification whenever their content is removed, plus users (and anyone who commented or otherwise has a direct link) can still see their content even after that. Reddit users may also contact the moderators via mod mail. In contrast, despite how Lemmy has the modlog, again there are no notifications for removal, and the modlog just says that the action was done by a "mod" (it used to always have the username, but now it can just say "mod", so over time Lemmy has actually moved in the direction to become MORE authoritarian than it used to be, not less).
To be fair, PieFed also lacks a mod mail or notification upon removal of content, but I feel like for Piefed it is simply because it is new and new features being added monthly, even practically weekly. Whereas for Lemmy it gives an impression at least that it is a design choice that seems unlikely to ever change towards more democratic principles. We will see how they each develop over more time I suppose.
For now, many Lemmy instances are very free and open, subject to the software constraints, while others are extremely closed down, most especially lemmy.ml that the main Lemmy developer seems to spend an inordinate amount of time moderating rather than tweaking the codebase. That's fine btw, it's his code and he can do whatever he wants with it, although for me I choose PieFed instead, for all the above reasons and so much more.
Speaking of, none of what you said sounds to me like it should result in someone receiving a visual icon due to poor reputation. I've had some massively downvoted content myself, but if the system is implemented properly then it will consider more like a median downvoting rather than maximum or even average. Theoretically someone who only made 10 comments and >=9 of those were downvoted heavily, yeah they would get that icon. However, the icon does not cause filtering of their content (there are other things that can but those are entirely separate and not based on the user account), it's merely a visual display. I've upvoted, downvoted, and replied to people's comments even when I can see that icon - so it in no way blocks me from doing so or from seeing it in the first place. But it does (helpfully imho) label it, so that I have a better indicator going in what I am getting myself into.
Like I said, I see your side and I don't agree with it, fundamentally. I only gave one hypothetical, btw, the rest was on the unreliability of votes as a metric. And I just don't see the point on an open forum where anyone can respond at any time. Plus, there are reasons and recourse for mod actions, but no one has to justify a downvote.
Lemmy isn't my tribe and Piefed isn't my enemy, I'll probably end up using both, or whatever ends up working better for me. The point of decentralization is having places like .today, .blahaj, .ml and .hexbear all doing governance however the hell they want, and being able to freely choose between them. An authoritarian platform would be obligatory, not federated with the competition, non-transparent, and centralize power to one or a few individuals. I don't even think it's possible for .ml to be authoritarian because participation is a choice.
However, I can see which mods performed what action and from what community, granted I use the web apps with more features. But I agree, not getting a notification should for sure be fixed and mod mail for big communities would be cool, and I wish there was a way to see deleted content, but the mod actions definitely aren't a secret and anyone can send them a message about it.
Notifications for mod actions are already implemented for Lemmy 1.0. Mod mail would take a lot of work to implement, and we have plenty of other things to work on. Being able to view your own removed posts makes sense, will note that down.