unruffled

joined 10 months ago
MODERATOR OF
[–] unruffled@anarchist.nexus 16 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)
[–] unruffled@anarchist.nexus 16 points 3 weeks ago (1 children)

What the hell, I thought Spain would have given them a warmer welcome under Sánchez.

[–] unruffled@anarchist.nexus 3 points 1 month ago

Ok, I won't try to drag you into it. But if you feel you can support this alternative proposal or some (enhanced) variation of it, then I think we can work to find common ground, if the devs are open to it.

[–] unruffled@anarchist.nexus 4 points 1 month ago

Hi Snoopy, please see my recent comment for another suggestion on how to manage the issue of modlog removals: https://anarchist.nexus/post/643502/comment/3833833

[–] unruffled@anarchist.nexus 3 points 1 month ago

Edit: I realized it was missing an arrow.

Me2CWWZErTETbnH.png

[–] unruffled@anarchist.nexus 5 points 1 month ago (5 children)

I 100% agree modlog abuse is something that needs to be addressed. But I'd much prefer for admins and users to be consulted about such changes, because Rimu's currently "solution" undermines trust, breaks transparency, and breaks normal federation. That's why one gung ho developer doing whatever he pleases can be a liability on occasion instead of an asset.

I'd like to suggest an alternative approach that could work for both Lemmy and Piefed, while maintaining normal federation.

Proposed process for "Restricting" visibility of a modlog entry:

Type 1

  • Person: The originating instance admin/moderator
  • Action: During admin or mod comment/post removal, enable a toggle to set the modlog entry as "Restricted"

Type 2

  • Person: The originating instance admin only
  • Action: If admin user, enable on/off toggle for "Restricted" flag for a modlog entry which will override any previously set flag. The updated flag status would then federate out to all federated instances.

Type 3

  • Person: federated instance admins only
  • Action: If admin user, enable on/off toggle for "Restricted" flag for a modlog entry which will override any previously set flag. The updated flag status would only apply to the federated instance and would not federate out.

Explanation

For type 1 scenarios, once a mod or admin at the originating instance performs a comment or post removal, they would have the option to restrict public access to the modlog entry. There should be a clear warning, "This option should be used very sparingly, and only for defamatory comments, CSAM, or personally identified information." The default should be for "restricted" status to be off, as is the case currently. This alone would deal with a great many of these issues.

For type 2 scenarios, instance admins would be able to override the status of the "restricted" toggle for all modlog entries. That will enable admins to override the status set by mods within their own instance. If set by an admin of the originating instance, then then updated "restricted" status should federate to all federated instances. This will allow us to deal with the occasions where internal mod actions need to be overruled.

For type 3 scenarios, this allows for any instance to have the freedom to override the federated status of the modlog entry at the admin's discretion. That allows for whistleblowing in event an instance is abusing the "Restricted" flag, and maintains the independence of each instance to make that choice for themselves. Of course, doing so may invite a defederation or other sanctions if other admins disagreed with changing the "restricted" status. So I think this is a reasonable checks-and-balances approach, which provides necessary info to federated instance admins, so we can all trust that the function is not being abused.

image

What I would really like is some serious engagement from the developers of PieFed and Lemmy on this issue, since it is clearly something that we would all like to see resolved as a priority item. Currently I believe the software platform itself is likely non-compliant with GDPR requests due to the current modlog implementation.

Rimu's "solution" really fixes nothing because there is a simple and obvious workaround. A user creates an account on piefed.social or another "trusted" instance, creates a community on that instance, then weaponizes the modlog from within the trusted circle.

And in addition to not addressing the fundamental issue, the "solution" also introduces the concept of two-tiers of federation. The "trusted" instances get "first-class" federation, but anyone the admin feels are not trusted gets assigned a "second-class" version of federation, including much less visibility. That is simply shadow banning under another name, and it feels like a way too Reddit-like for comfort, imo. The user should be in full control of their own feed preferences, not the instance admin.

I also think that by default, all moderation actions and content should continue to be public as a core principle. A removal from the modlog should be the exception, not an instance-wide rule that is set at the whim of one person.

Does this not seem like a more reasonable and sane approach to take? Rimu's approach appears to have been unilaterally decided, poorly thought out, and quite honestly just makes me want to step away from the PieFed project altogether. Why was community feedback not sought before this change was implemented? And why was Rimu's particular implementation decided to be the best path forward for PieFed? I'd like to understand whether other developers and admins actually using PieFed are actually being consulted about these changes in advance, or are these ultimately unilateral decisions being made by one person with a short fuse?

[–] unruffled@anarchist.nexus 4 points 1 month ago (1 children)

Hi again,

Ok, so good news.

The user has agreed to delete the comment in the morning (it would be 3am for them now as they messaged me about an hour ago) so that should also give Mr Kaplan time to restore it.

So if you check in about 8-10 hours, hopefully it will be deleted.

[–] unruffled@anarchist.nexus 2 points 1 month ago (3 children)

It will need to be restored only so that the user can delete it themselves. I have asked them as their instance admin, so I anticipate they will comply. We will need to give them a reasonable amount of time to respond though.

I think this is the only viable way to get this done easily, given the way federation works, so I think we should give it a shot.

[–] unruffled@anarchist.nexus 1 points 1 month ago (5 children)

Just a quick update. This is more complicated than it might seem at first glance. I spoke to a couple of other admins including Mr Kaplan from LW and apparently the only mechanism in Lemmy to federate out a removal of a modlog entry is for them to restore the comment, and then have the OP on anarchist.nexus delete the comment themselves.

I have reached out to the person who posted that comment and asked them if they are willing to delete it. If not, then I think the only alternative would be to reach out to every single federated instance admin to purge the comment manually. And I don't like your chances of reaching them all. This particular scenario has not been catered for yet in the software, unfortunately.

So, I am just waiting to hear back from the user. If they agree to delete the comment, then I will contact Kr Kaplan again to have the comment restored, and it should then be deleted shortly after that by the OP.

[–] unruffled@anarchist.nexus 1 points 1 month ago

This aged well :)

[–] unruffled@anarchist.nexus 3 points 1 month ago

I'll smoke to that.

[–] unruffled@anarchist.nexus 2 points 2 months ago

Trump didn't win because he was popular, he won because the Democrats are so massively unpopular, even with their own base. And one of the main reasons the Dems are so unpopular is the spineless Chuck Schmoozer who takes his orders directly from Netanyahu.

Protest votes against Trump will be the only reason the Dems might be able to get re-elected. But even if by some miracle the Dems manage to take control of both houses, they will squander their time and be "unable" to make any serious changes to address income inequality, or to deal properly with the massive problems with the US healthcare scam. Maybe they'll be able to legislate for abortion rights again at a federal level, because it doesn't cost them anything, but tbh it wouldn't surprise me if they fuck that up too.

 

As calls for Donald Trump to be impeached flooded social media after his genocidal threats toward Iran on Tuesday, the Senate’s Democratic leaders put out a statement late in the day that merely condemned Trump’s comment without any vow to take action. In a joint statement on Tuesday afternoon, Democratic leaders Senators Chuck Schumer (New York) and Jeanne Shaheen (New Hampshire)…

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From Truthout via this RSS feed

 

The Third Hexbear Palestinian Donation Drive starts NOW, as explained in my previous post: I landed a job i…

 

A nice little read by Caitlin Johnstone.

The real violent extremists are the oligarchs and imperialists who run the US-centralized empire from both mainstream parties.

Not Antifa. Not trans people. Not anti-genocide activists. Not protesters against ICE.

The extremists who are inflicting the real violence and abuse in our world are the ones committing genocide, starting wars, backing blockades, imposing starvation sanctions, arming proxy conflicts, circling the planet with hundreds of military bases, and flirting with nuclear armageddon.

Donald Trump is a violent extremist. Joe Biden is a violent extremist. Keir Starmer is a violent extremist. Benjamin Netanyahu is a violent extremist.

Oligarchs who knit themselves into the murderous imperial power structure like Jeff Bezos, Elon Musk, Peter Thiel, Miriam Adelson and Larry Ellison are violent extremists.

The Democratic Party is a violent extremist organization. The Republican Party is a violent extremist organization.

War profiteers like Raytheon, Lockheed Martin and Northrop Grumman are violent extremist organizations.

Empire management firms which facilitate imperial violence and control like Palantir, Oracle and Starlink are violent extremist organizations.

There is no designated terrorist group foreign or domestic which can hold a candle to the death toll and human suffering that has been inflicted by the western empire.

 

Since it become a bit of a thing to post National Post stories here these days.

The National Post systematically rewrites wire stories to include loaded anti-Palestinian language, omit the context of occupation, and frame stories around Israeli viewpoints, a comprehensive data analysis shows.

The groups Canadians for Justice and Peace in the Middle East (CJPME) and The Media Bias Project of Tech for Palestine (T4P) analyzed 197 Canadian Press (CP) news stories about Palestine and compared them to the version published by the National Post. The data gathered drew from articles published between October 9, 2023, to September 18, 2024.

 

Over the past 22 months, the war in Gaza has become the most deadly conflict for journalists in history.

Last week, five Palestinian journalists – Hussam al-Masri, Mariam Abu Dagga, Mohammed Salama, Ahmed Abu Aziz and Moaz Abu Taha – were killed in a double strike on Nasser hospital by the Israeli military, bringing the total number of journalists and media workers killed in this conflict since October 2023 to at least 189, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ). Other groups put the tally far higher.

Just one week before, another four Al Jazeera journalists and two freelancers were killed by a targeted Israeli strike on their tent outside al-Shifa hospital in Gaza City. The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said it deliberately targeted the Al Jazeera crew – the correspondent Anas al-Sharif, who had reported on the war since its outset, the reporter Mohammed Qreiqeh, the cameraman Ibrahim Zaher, and Mohammed Noufal, a crew driver and cameraman. The IDF claimed it had evidence that Sharif was a Hamas terrorist.

The CPJ and other organisations say that this claim is part of a pattern of misinformation – along with other cases where slain journalists have been labelled as Hamas fighters or operatives – and is without credibility.

The Israeli military has prevented international journalists from entering and reporting on the war, and has decimated Gaza’s own media community. Under international law, journalists should be protected civilians, yet the CPJ says that Israel is “engaging in the deadliest and most deliberate effort to kill and silence journalists that CPJ has ever documented”.

“Palestinian journalists are being threatened, directly targeted and murdered by Israeli forces, and are arbitrarily detained and tortured in retaliation for their work. By silencing the press – those who document and bear witness – Israel is silencing the war,” the organisation said.

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