this post was submitted on 07 Jul 2023
25 points (80.5% liked)
Lemmy.world Support
3217 readers
12 users here now
Lemmy.world Support
Welcome to the official Lemmy.world Support community! Post your issues or questions about Lemmy.world here.
This community is for issues related to the Lemmy World instance only. For Lemmy software requests or bug reports, please go to the Lemmy github page.
This community is subject to the rules defined here for lemmy.world.
You can also DM https://lemmy.world/u/lwreport or email [email protected] (PGP Supported) if you need to reach our directly to the admin team.
Follow us for server news 🐘
Outages 🔥
https://status.lemmy.world
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
Crossposting my comment here, as I just noticed the conversation has moved to this thread.
I think you're mistaken on a few things here:
Look, this all leaves a bad look on your new instance while all of this could have been handled much more smoothly without the need for astroturfing a few days ago (I know you claim the user isn't affiliated with you, but it still felt weird that literally after that you answer with another ad for your instance "it's not us we're sorry, anyway here's why you should join us") and then coordinate this shameless closure of [email protected] over your private chat. It could have been handled in a friendly way just like many c/Technology communities coexist across instances without the need for one to feel the need to extinguish all the other "Technology"s.
Would you have a problem with the current Android community re-opening under new owners?
That will be a decision for lemmy.world admin to decide. However, I think it’s important that mergers be considered distinct from closures/abandonment. Previously on Reddit, moderators would sometimes merge their teams to keep up with workloads. This would mean locking one subreddit. If such a community were to be requested on r/redditrequest, it would be denied because it wasn’t abandoned, but instead repurposed as a way to redirect members.
Opting to fulfill such requests would be more in line with the current Reddit admin approach of overriding existing moderators. It’s a valid path to take, but one that I would be very hesitant to support. I think a community could be opened up if truly abandoned (i.e., the place it redirects has been retired and the moderators are no longer logging into the Fediverse).
It's definitely a complex issue - and totally agree, mergers are not the same.
It does feel disingenuous for you to dodge a yes or no question.
I'm not trying to be rude, but setting up a new instance without clear (edit - server level) policies and rules and no GDPR compliance and then expecting people to move over rather than choose to move doesn't look great.
If you want everyone over to your instance because of whatever reasons you should be very transparent why and have it set up appropriately before that move starts - and be plain that you don't want competing communities.
If you are happy to have multiple communities, it's easy just to say you support that.
Sorry if it sounded like a dodge (it's also 5 AM here so I'm half asleep). Certainly wasn't my intent. My opinion is that admin shouldn't be taking away communities from moderators unless they've truly abandoned, not merged. But I also recognize this will be something for each instance's admin to decide.
But the question of multiple communities in terms of starting a different one or supporting another alternative? That's great and an integral part of the Fediverse - each community will be a reflection of their particular rulesets and approaches to moderation.
Folks are absolutely welcome to access the community from other instances. There's no need to switch your login. One my fellow mods actually runs his own instance that he logs in through.
Some other options: https://lemmy.ml/c/android (probably the oldest on Lemmy) kbin.social/m/android squabbles.io/s/android
I shared some more insights about rationale for the instance in my earlier posts if you don't mind checking my history. I'd get you the links but I'm about to pass out! I didn't manage the Mike and Devgard's transition but I'd be happy to answer any questions you might have. Just leave them here and I'll respond tomorrow.
Definitely time for a sleep!
I have seen your other comments, and I think my issue is (hopefully obviously!) not at all with you, but it is the principle - the choice of multiple communities is being taken away.
For what it is worth (not much) I think you wanting to take load off .world is great, and you patiently answer people's questions and are polite and helpful. As I said, I don't mean to be rude, but if this was happening to a community I was invested in I would be angry and rightly so I think (but to be clear I have never posted on Android, and really it is the principle).
You are doing what seems to be a good job handling a tricky situation, although I think your server needs some clear policies and goals and server-level rules, clear information about funding and GDPR compliance etc. to help build trust. My personal opinion based on seeing one post is that Mike, on the other hand, is not handing this well at all - and comes across as very rude and really condescending and I have replied to his post saying this. Responses you have made compared to his are miles apart. That's just my impression, and not meant as a personal attack. I would hope he can look at how you post and learn from it. Good luck with the moderation if recent responses are how he speaks to people!
No rudeness felt here! I really do appreciate you taking the time to share your thoughts. These conversations are important. A few thoughts:
Hope you managed to get a decent sleep!
On GDPR, this is a thread from today: https://lemmy.world/post/1131665 - there is a helpful post to some other discussions. Just linking it as there are a few good observations made. Totally agree, there are seemingly a lot of challenges but I am not sure there is an appreciation of how easy it is for anyone to raise non-compliance and the consequences. I'm sure some people have a really good understanding, but I suspect some do not - especially given how vastly complex it is and the lack of urgency some people seem to treat it with.
I feel like there is a lot to learn about how to manage community transitions / mergers / transfers etc as Lemmy grows.
Not much sleep, but thanks for this! I might reach out to pick your brain on a few things GDPR related at some point, if that's alright with you.
Sure thing, although I am by no means an expert at all (companies often have people who specialise in GDPR compliance).
A good reference point is https://ico.org.uk/for-organisations/uk-gdpr-guidance-and-resources/ and https://gdpr.eu/ including their checklist.
The full regulation text is https://gdpr-info.eu/.
Bro, not to be rude, but that's literally abandoning the current one. You can sugarcoat it and use all the fancy words however you want, the fact remains that you closed the community for 19k people and the decision was made only by 2 mods after you've shamelessly asked them to do that over private chat. 19k users didn't even have a choice and one of your new mods even made it openly clear that he doesn't give a shit what 19k users think and that it's bad luck for those who don't like the forced closure:
This one-man decision can never be called a "merger", just stop deceiving yourselves. Again, it's a forced closure by 2 current mods and new Reddit mods who couldn't imagine a world where they don't own the community. I repeat, you robbed 19k users of their choice to stay here, it is a forced closure. There is no "merger" just because you agreed with how Reddit was running things in the past (and conveniently leave out that right now they don't allow for locked communities either).
I think it goes without saying that we don't want to import today's Reddit into the Fediverse. With that said, even Reddit today does not go as far as to force merge-locked subreddits open (although their bot has been known to mass message some normally locked subreddits).
Mike may have been a bit blunt in his response to you, likely in reaction to the accusatory tone of your post and comments here. I completely understand that you dislike Reddit moderators and that's fine. But it's worth keeping in mind that many folks have moved to the Fediverse over recent weeks because we disagree with the very ideas you're currently espousing - namely how Reddit has been trying to subvert moderator discretion over their communities by threatening/actioning replacements when decisions don't go their way.
It's insane how you don't see how you're trying to usurp a community of 19k users and make it seem as if it was a collective decision when it was not. It's insane that you Reddit mods are still not ashamed to have pulled this off.
How hard is it to understand?
YOU. ARE. NOT. THE. 19K. MEMBERS. OF. THE. COMMUNITY.
YOU HAVE NO RIGHT TO DECIDE THAT WE AS A COMMUNITY ARE MOVING. IT WAS NEVER YOURS AND YOU HAVE NO CLAIM ON IT.
NO ONE EVER ASKED TO MOVE. However, YOU are free to leave and have fun with your new instance.
YOU DO NOT HAVE THE RIGHT to close the community and prevent its 19k members from using it.
IT IS OUR COMMUNITY, NOT YOURS, AND WE WANT IT BACK.
You should be deeply ashamed of how you're still defending this.
This is what I meant by being too angry. For Christ's sake, it's been a few days and all that happened is a community was redirected to a different one.
I used to be this angry about Reddit, years ago, and looking back it was something I should not have invested so much hatred toward. Are you expecting to actually reach reconciliation with the involved parties or are you expecting for instance admins to side with you and override the opposition?
I am angry, you are right and I will stop interacting with the very person who forced this takeover and forced [email protected] to shamelessly become a redirection page, because usually nothing good comes out of interacting with people acting in bad faith since the start.
Whatever the parties involved advance, they acted in bad faith and reconciliation is not possible when they want this instance's community to die first and siphon off its users, and they still defend that they have the right to force this over the 19K subscribers who had no say in this. They call this "moderator discretion" and us simply being "out of luck". This is why a reconciliation is not possible.
The right course of action is to officially treat [email protected] as being abandoned by its mods, remove the "current" mods (who have no claim to the community anymore, since they themselves abandoned it and cannot act in its interest since they made it clear that their goal is to have only one main community over at the Reddit mods' instance) and then appoint new moderators. I even volunteer to do so, select new ones from that same community and maintain its activity.
The only way to solve this is for the community to be reopened again under new moderators. And the old mods and the Reddit mods can obviously pursue their own plans on their new instances.
And [email protected] exists within lemdro.id, that's also the beauty of the Fediverse. I don't trust your instance (and I don't have to even think about it, no offense) and I, and I'm sure many too but they weren't even given a voice and you see nothing wrong with it, were already happy with our community here. You have no right to expect us to close it for you to grow your 3 days old one.
I'm sure more folks will chime in when they're awake due to time zones, but the majority who are voting on their announcement seem to be supportive thus far?
I absolutely support you setting up a new community, but absolutely don't support closing down the original one here on this instance - people should be able to decide which community they prefer. One will naturally grow to be the dominant one.
.world are transparent about funding and approach, have clear policies in place. I can't currently see any of that on .id, and the only thing I have to go off is posts you have made and the conversation around it.
To me, it feels very disingenuous and currently your instance is not at all transparent and more importantly not GDPR compliant from what I can see - therefore, how can I trust it?
Hello, I've built software to be GDPR compliant before.. so far as I can tell, NO Lemmy instance is GDPR compliant yet due to no way for the original server to delete user content from remote servers. Is this wrong?
I think you're right. Some instances do what they can to be compliant, e.g. .world have various notices and wording in place but no cookie information and consent etc.
The data and how it is transferred and processed and stored, along with deletion requests I have no idea how that is going to be compliant!
This, the dude is just giving us more reasons to completely break this shit and kick the current insecure mods out and forcibly reopen the community. I'll remind everyone here of what the other mod said when asked about whether the 19k people have a say in this:
A person saying this should be removed immediately. A mod saying this, and with [email protected] still supporting him since part of the deal is that this mod will become a mod on the new community of the foreign instance, should not be trusted anywhere, even on the new instance.