this post was submitted on 22 Oct 2023
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I 'upvote' more or less all posts I interact with (sometimes I forget to vote). I feel like we should bring back open dialogues and heavily dissuade people from simply disregarding someone's entire belief system or ideals based on 200 characters of text (an example).

Think about one person in your life who you first thought was a complete asshole and once you got to know them they were pretty cool, maybe you became best friends with them. The point is, judging a person based on a minute snippet in time is a fool's errand, and your own state of mind contributes a lot to your own judgement of people. Your next thought might be, well they have a history of x, y AND z, so they deserve every bit of judgement coming their way! I would ask you, why? Are you not simply fueling further hatred, vitriol and division? So instead of stopping for a moment and thinking about the world from someone else's perspective, you'd rather just spit out some more hatred and move on like that person doesn't exist?

I would love to see some solution to the shitty state of the Internet. I only say Internet because for the most part this doesn't happen in real life in my experience. I think it has to do with consequences and social sigma and so on. I reckon it would be pretty awesome if there was something like the following:

  • all upvotes are free range, people can give out upvotes like they were candy
  • downvotes come at a "cost", whereby if you want to downvote someone you have to reply directly to them with some justification, say minimum number of characters, words, etc.

In an ideal world, and setup, this would help raise positivity in the world and have people at the very least have a second thought before being negative.

Yes I understand there would be flaws, I've worked with and used computers for a long time, I know. I chose not to delve deep into those as I feel that would defeat the purpose of the message I'm trying to convey. And, you know, lead by example.

What do ya'll think? Any suggestions to boost positivity in the world, I'm all ears, smash them and any other thoughts in the comments.

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[–] [email protected] 82 points 8 months ago (2 children)

downvotes come at a “cost”, whereby if you want to downvote someone you have to reply directly to them with some justification, say minimum number of characters, words, etc.

I think it's the complete opposite. Platforms with downvotes tend to be less toxic because you don't have to reply to insane people to tell them they're wrong, whereas platforms like Twitter get really toxic because you only see the likes, so people tend to get into fights and "ratio" them which actually increases the attention they get and spreads their message to other people.

In general, platforms without upvotes/downvotes tend to be the most toxic imo. Platforms like old-school forums and 4chan are a complete mess because low-effort troll content is as loud as high effort thoughtful ones. It takes one person to de-rail a conversation and get people to fight about something else, but with downvotes included you just lower their visibility. It's basically crowdsourced moderation, and it works relatively well.

As for ways to reduce toxicity, shrug. Moderation is the only thing that really stops it but if you moderate too much then you'll be called out for censoring people too much, and telling them not to get mad is just not going to happen.

My idea for less toxicity is having better filtering options for things people want to see. Upon joining a platform it would give easy options to filter out communities that are political or controversial. That's what I'm doing on Lemmy, I'm here for entertainment, not arguing.

[–] [email protected] 20 points 8 months ago (1 children)

Yep exactly, you'll get hiveminds and echo chambers without downvotes

Instagram is another example. Part of it is the algorithm promoting controversial and toxic comments, and part of it is the lack of downvotes and threaded comments.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 8 months ago (1 children)

Do you? Take for instance an far right subreddit. Any decent opinion will probably be downvoted to hell, thus forming a echo chamber

[–] [email protected] 9 points 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago)

What I said was that echo chambers still form even without downvotes being an option. Plenty of spaces are echo chambers without downvotes.

I agree that downvotes can amplify an echo chamber. But they also cut down on a lot of toxicity that's otherwise present when all the controversial / toxic / hurtful comments stay prominently displayed. When that happens, there's just a cycle of polarization and more people saying controversial and hurtful things.

The benefits of having downvotes outweigh the small amplification of the echo chambers they can cause. However I'm curious to see how it goes on Lemmy. A lot of the places where I've seen the above problem were places that prioritized engagement (instagram, twitter, YouTube).

[–] [email protected] 3 points 8 months ago (1 children)

Haha I think 4chan is a completely different beast. I'm seeing quite differing opinions on the thread, which is cool. It's enlightening to see how people think about issues like this. I can see how both sides hold merit. Though in a way I disagree on simply telling people they're wrong. I feel you can't reason a person out of a position they didn't reason themselves into. In my experience, it's much more effective to ask people questions and maybe they begin to see, or not, it's out of my control at that point.

[–] LesserAbe 7 points 8 months ago

People don't generally want to argue other people out of positions, because they're not usually online to get into debates. A downvote isn't telling someone they're a bad person, it's feedback on a specific post, which the poster can ignore or use as information to try to improve whatever they're communicating. (Me, I do like to debate)

[–] [email protected] 64 points 8 months ago (3 children)

Every single time someone makes a post with this opinion, they're either a Nazi or a Nazi apologist. They don't want discourse, they just don't like it when people tell them to shut up. It makes it hard to take their arguments seriously because I know they're just excuses.

Lo and behold, you have a downvoted comment in your recent history where you argue Nazis should be allowed a safe space to talk in. The pattern continues.

Criticism is a part of public discourse as much as approval is. People who allow positive responses freely but put walls in the way of criticism tend to be the ones trying to silence all forms of criticism. They want a positive feedback loop so they can pretend people agree with them. Some people need to be told to shut up quickly and decisively.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 8 months ago

Sounds more like an enlightened centrist to me, but same difference really.

If a maniac wanted to shoot someone ten times, and the victim wated not to be shot, the enlightened centrist would smugly proclaim that the maniac shooting the victim five times would be a just middle ground that'd be fair to both parties, and that the victim would be unreasonable, intolerant, and antidemocratic for not agreeing to it.

Same result, orders of magnitude more hypocrisy and idiocy, and of course you can't criticise them, since by enabling the maniacs they're just debating and trying to find a compromise, and disagreeing with them is being hostile and going against the very principles of democracy itself.

Malignant asshats, the whole lot of them, wouldn't recognize the paradox of tolerance if you violently hit them in the head with it.

[–] [email protected] 19 points 8 months ago (2 children)

I'd rather get a meaningless downvote so that someone gets their frustration out than having to read a rant ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

[–] [email protected] 4 points 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago)

I see your point, but just don’t read the rant. You don’t need that crap. Nobody does.

The other day, somebody responded to a comment of mine with an emotional wall of text. In just the first few sentences, they were already putting words in my mouth and getting mad at me about assumptions they had come up with. I didn’t bother reading the rest of their manifesto, because it probably went even further off the rails from there.

Yeah, sometimes complex topics or thoughtful responses require a long comment, but you can usually read the tone early on. Snark, condescension, and anger aren’t worth your time.

I just realized that, ironically, this might be considered a rant. Oh well.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 8 months ago

To each their own!

[–] [email protected] 19 points 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago) (1 children)

I like the feature where a post's score is hidden for the first 30 minutes or so. People are very critical of posts with a score of 0 or -1, but if a post is new it really isn't hard to dip into the negatives. Hiding the score for the first few minutes prevents a post from being reflexively downvoted just because the first two people who seen it disagreed.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 8 months ago (1 children)

Sometimes it feels like a bandwagon. I'm sure a lot of the time people mindlessly downvote instinctually or are more likely to based simply on the existing score.

[–] LesserAbe 3 points 8 months ago

You're right people may quickly downvote a post. If it's happening, it's because they didn't like it. There might be more people who like it in the world elsewhere, but they didn't see it or they didn't press the button. It's more helpful to take it as information, instead of trying to argue with it.

[–] [email protected] 10 points 8 months ago

Hacker news has a great system - downvoting is locked behind a karma threshold and flag (default on). It means that new accounts can't downvote swarm to shut down opinions and mature accounts have more care when downvoting. The ability to flag restrict does require a centralized trusted authority though... and HN is basically as good as it is because dang is fucking awesome at their job.

[–] kromem 8 points 8 months ago (1 children)

The simplest solution is dealing with visibility by changing default sorting settings.

Maybe the top three comments are always most upvoted, most upvoted new (i.e. 'hot'), and most controversial.

But really the upvote/downvote is just data, and it's up to each client to handle that data as seen fit.

Though yes, there's very often 'hivemind' where people will pile on top of whatever the trend of a comment is, upvoting ones that had a few initial upvotes or downvoting ones that had a few initial downvotes. It's less common to see a comment switch from the initial momentum, even when a very similar comment in a different place in the thread has a very different response from users.

So the solution there is to show relevant ranking/sorting data like "3rd most controversial" or "22nd most upvoted" but to hide the specific counts.

This was part of the whole Reddit thing of hiding votes on new comments to prevent bandwagoning like lemmings (pun intended).

[–] [email protected] 2 points 8 months ago

I’d be technically impractical, but I’ve always thought there should be a system for weighing of individual users feedback. I follow a lot of trade related communities and 100% see a lot of issues where bad, wrong, and sometimes just plain dangerous advice gets a flood of upvotes from the amateur community while the handful of downvotes from qualified individuals gets drowned out. I think OP’s idea of making upvotes easy and downvotes difficult exacerbates this kind of issue.

I can also see the issue where a mod team simply blesses the users that they agree with and it just reinforces the echo chamber effect that is already an issue in some communities.

[–] [email protected] 8 points 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago)

Wouldn't nerving downvotes/dislikes make it harder to voice your option freely? It's the easiest way to signal if you dislike something (And ofc the other way around with upvotes). But if you make it harder to do that, you'll suddenly have a lot of people that just don't bother. That will create a false sense of acceptance of whatever has been said and will make it easier to create echo chambers.

[–] [email protected] 7 points 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago)

Limiting downvotes forces other people to think about bad ideas more, at the cost of letting people with bad ideas think about their bad ideas less. Ideally the bad idea has some tangible rebuttal that the original poster can consider, but ultimately the onus is on you to understand why your ideas aren't landing. This is all presupposing an idea that is worthy of consideration. People aren't obligated to convince themselves you're right, you have the job of convincing others they are wrong, or realizing that you yourself are wrong.

[–] echo64 7 points 8 months ago (1 children)

Upvotes/downvotes mean nothing. At least here. On reddit, if someone says something people don't like, their post will be downvoted below the threshold and automatically hidden. Lemmy doesn't do the automatic hiding, so the downvotes just mean nothing.

The only thing it really does is let people express their frustration or agreement without having to start a conversation. Like yelling boo or cheering at a performance. I'm not against that.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 8 months ago (1 children)

Don't the comments sort in order of popularity?

[–] echo64 5 points 8 months ago (1 children)
[–] [email protected] 5 points 8 months ago (1 children)

But that means I have to read them all. One of the things that drew me to the other platforms was the fact that the smartest or whittiest answers came to the top.

[–] echo64 0 points 8 months ago (2 children)

Oh, that's not what you get on any of these platforms. The most upvoted thing is just gonna be the thing that made people press the upvote. Which is usually either because it's funny or "I agree."

The top thing is often flat out incorrect in whatever it's saying, but people don't know and it sounds about right so up it goes. Make a habit of reading everything, it'll do you good. And at least for now lemmy is good at scaring away the racists and the nazis so you don't have to read any of that.

[–] captainlezbian 7 points 8 months ago

Yes, but it’s still always better than stuff I see at the bottom. And it’s rarely worse than when order was determined by speed of reply

[–] [email protected] 4 points 8 months ago

The voting mechanism enabled "the wisdom of crowds."

[–] [email protected] 6 points 8 months ago

Most posts I come across on lemmy/reddit, I do not vote on at all. I upvote when it is the same thing I was going to say, or when it is extraordinarily insightful or otherwise something more people need to see. I downvote when it is plainly objectively wrong or doesn't add to the discussion at all. The vast majority of posts and comments are neither of those. For example, I haven't voted on anything in this thread.

I liked the old structure of phpBB-style message boards where posts were just sorted chronologically and if there was a voting system, it didn't affect sorting. I found those a lot more engaging and they facilitate actual back-and-forth debate rather than naturally turning into one-sided circlejerks. I am not sure they can scale to current numbers of Internet users though; we would have to test in practice how to make that structure work nowadays.

Stack Exchange already has a system where if you downvote, you lose one reputation point, a small deterrent against downvoting.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 8 months ago

Because the websites don't police content, there are no rules. This requires a far higher exercise of self discipline when engaging with Internet posts, which many forgo with the anonymity of the Internet and lazy thinking. In other words, there is no constraint to "debate" and ultimately, no agreement what people are even talking about.

Extract what you feel is useful, but only under a critical eye.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago) (1 children)

I think a bigger issue is the acceptance of logical falicies leading to arguments that are nothing more than insult wars.

I can think of several instances but one that comes to the top was a long well reasoned argument for FM on phones. The writer put a great deal of effort into it then ended it with "do you know how stupid you sound [for taking the other position]." I made the mistake of pointing this out and was met with downvotes and told it was a very reddit thing to say.

I would love to see a platform where fallacious arguments were excluded until resubmitted or at least flagged. They do not encourage reasoned discourse.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 8 months ago

Nobody likes to be made to feel stupid. A person without knowledge isn't stupid on the face of it, they're just a person without knowledge. I think the moment you start insulting someone the argument or whatever is already over at that point. At that point it's not a discussion it's the beginning of a mud slinging match.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago) (1 children)

Yes.

My main gripe with Reddit was the voting system. I used it for several years but once my accounts got into the thousands of karma, I just started over again. Maybe it doesn't make sense to you, but worked for me. One of these accounts was only allowed to upvote, it was nice. First time I noticed the anxiety that the voting system caused on me, I went to askreddit and ask if there was a way to deactivate it, server side or client side. LOL, of course not.

Came to Lemmy: same problem. I used to browse Lemmy with Liftoff, but it doesn't hide the voting system. Recently tried Voyager, turns out it can hide the voting system. Now I feel immune to karens, white knights, bots, trolls and gatekeepers. It doesn't matter how unpopular my opinion is, I don't care if people doesn't agree, it shouldn't matter as long as my views are thoughtful and honest. I put my thoughts out there expecting other's may change mines, but I don't like being downvoted to hell with no discourse inbetween.

EDIT: TIL, in this thread that you can deactivate the vote system in your instance profile. Thanks.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 8 months ago

I think your comment is the best take I've read so far. I agree wholeheartedly. As soon as I read it I thought of when I used to play WoW. Many alts I created similar to this. Having a fresh character, but something new without all the complications that came with being a higher level, more useless "responsibilities" with no real pay off. Because in the end it was still just a game. You may not fully see the connection, just know I understand where you're coming from in my own way. Thanks for sharing.

[–] alvvayson 3 points 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago) (2 children)

I recognize the problem you have described and I wish there was a solution.

I just don't know what the solution is.

Voting definitely helps filter out trolls and nonsensical comments. And more intelligent people actually learn from the down votes that they can rephrase their opinions to make them more palatable.

I, myself, regularly get down voted to oblivion when I express an opinion a bit too crudely. And that actually helps me finetune.

I also regularly just delete comments with lots of downvotes. If nobody is going to see it or appreciate it, I might as well clean it up.

The thing is, there are no visible down votes in real life, but people do form negative opinions.

It becomes more problematic when the hivemind votes down very valuable comments, because they don't fit the narrative. It's a bit like cancel culture.

For some reason, it works out much better on Lemmy than on reddit. I suspect reddit is filled with networks of bots and Lemmy isn't. Also, I think the Lemmy user base is still a bit more intelligent and mature. Kind of like early days of reddit, slashdot, usenet.

Once a platform gets overrun by the masses, the average intelligence and maturity reverts to the mean of the population. And we all know what that means.

[–] Candelestine 1 points 8 months ago (1 children)

Since you sound like you appreciate the principled approach, I'd like to encourage you to not delete downvoted comments. They can be used for other people's learning too, not just yours.

I've often spent a half hour staring at a particular downvoted comment, trying to brainstorm all the directions the downvotes could realistically be coming from. This can be helpful sometimes, and is much easier to do when they aren't routinely deleted.

It's not "messy" any more than people are, and much like writing down your work in math, it helps leave a better trail to see how online thought and discourse evolves over time.

What I'd encourage instead is to add a labeled edit that includes your revised thoughts and how they evolved through your process. That's what I usually do anyway, people don't seem to mind.

[–] alvvayson 1 points 8 months ago

There is an egoistic reason though.

Just in this thread, OP is being called out by others for another comment they made in their past.

It's just easier to keep a clean history by deleting unpopular content.

Most people have clients that filter negative comments out, so too few people will see it to make it worthwhile.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 8 months ago

It's not an easy problem to solve. 'ppreciate ya.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago)

Ive always thought votes and scores should be completely hidden. Still sort the posts and comments by upvote/downvote scores, but don't show them. Then no one can obsess over their internet points and there wouldn't be dumb karma farming content.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 8 months ago

If the problem is people upvoting and downvoting in vain, I'm surprised nobody has suggested a system only allowing people to make ten a day or something.

Either way, I can see right through the annoyance.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago)

downvotes come at a “cost”, whereby if you want to downvote someone you have to reply directly to them with some justification, say minimum number of characters, words, etc.

I would choose a different solution. Instead of always up or down voting by 1 point, everyone gets a fixed points budget per day, that is then distributed between each post you vote on. So if you only up vote one post, this vote counts more than the vote from someone who votes on 100 posts per day.

This would solve the mass down voting of legit content on YouTube or Facebook, where quite often conspiracy dipshits in their telegram channels post videos or Channels that should be down voted, while their own right wing propaganda gets upvoted. So the most active accounts who spent all day on the social would be muted, while average User would have a more important voice.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 8 months ago

I think that human nature is not meant to be universally shared in all its communities and that indeed there will always be the desire to have divisions, this to bind more with single individuals who become then family or friends. Being friends of all, but also only friendly, is a counter-evolutionary fantasy. The Internet is inadequate for long-range relationships, this is evident to all those who frequent large virtual communities. I sugget (even to myself) to press x more often.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 8 months ago

absolutely yes