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Where do you go on Lemmy for reliable news and politics?
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But, isn't that sort of the point of Lemmy? Link aggregation?
I've been going to all the individual sites as well since leaving Reddit. But, only because the news and politics culture in Lemmy is so atrocious.
Despite its faults, Reddit did an okay job of moderation. It's a shit show here. The posts are all either bots or edgy 8th graders from troll communities. It's a mess.
Ha, man, finally, 20 comments in and someone understands the question.
Based on all the responses so far I'm assuming a well moderated place doesn't exist on Lemmy yet, which is disappointing. I was hoping I just hadn't discovered it yet.
Yeah, it just doesn't really exist yet. I'm not sure a really well-moderated community for news content can exist yet on Lemmy, due to the culture that's slowly springing up, but if it did it'd have to be on a dedicated instance, I expect - one with a very, very dedicated set of moderators with relatively strict rules regarding what is sufficiently-well-sourced content, and all other communities on the instance being held up to the same bar in their specific niches in order to encourage that kind of posting culture.
Honestly, I don't think Reddit ever achieved a really good result either - the news subreddits were all dumpster fires to varying degrees - but Lemmy's immaturity worsens the issue here, I think. It's pretty appallingly obvious. I'd look elsewhere for news opinion aggregation, for the time being.
I think Reddit did a better job than you give them credit for. The may not have achieved eutopia, but they outperform all others who've tried up until this point.
Lemmy has more promise than Reddit, IMO, for well moderated news aggregation because they've seen the reddit model and can replicate it without the bondage of Reddit administration.
The problem, as it seems to me currently, is that Lemmy, specifically in the news and politics realm, lacks moderation of any quality. And, that's not necessarily a shot at moderators either. They're either new to the roll or there aren't enough of them.
They also don't have the benefit of year of users bitching and shaping the rules that govern a community, as Reddit has had.