kplaceholder

joined 2 years ago
[–] kplaceholder 10 points 1 year ago (3 children)

Besides what you have already been told, there already was war in both Ukraine and Israel. Ukraine's open military conflict with Russia has been active since at least 2014, and Israel has been in conflict with Palestine and neighbours since its foundation following WW2.

Wesern media not covering them until it was relevant to the US national interests and them not happening are entirely different things.

[–] kplaceholder 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I didn't know about Nostr, and honestly, thank you for letting me know. I find the idea behind the protocol to be pretty interesting, but wouldn't use it myself. I'm not keen on the idea of removing moderation altogether.

However, I do think that it's about time we rethink how moderation works on the Internet, and the fediverse should be a good place to start doing so. Perhaps my biggest gripe with the fediverse is that moderation works exactly the same as in corporate social media. Right now, moderators are picked under discretion of whatever the criteria of the admin are, and they are not subject to "the will of the people" so to speak. If a mod or admin acts in bad faith, the only recourse for the rest of the users is to leave, and maybe setup your own instance if you have the technical know-how. And while corporate media admins are somewhat constrained by investors, fediverse admins don't have to respond to anyone. Which is better than being bound by investors, but here, admins can and do take harsh decisions on a whim without having to justify anything to anyone. Which is honestly not a good thing.

So, while I imagined the fediverse as some network of interconnected small, self-managed communes, what we actually have is a network of petty fiefdoms, some of which do listen to their users even though they are under no obligation to do so, and others outright don't. I don't mean to say that centralized services are better at this, but in the end I'm having some of the same problems regarding arbitrariness of moderation and admin decisions here that I had on Reddit and Twitter.

I see the fediverse as the future of social media, but not in its current form. The way it currently works keeps us bound to drama and petty feuds between admins of instances, and that is unavoidable while large fedi platforms are hosted by single people or very small groups of people. Perhaps the way that this could be avoided would be by using a protocol that enforces decentralization of hosting, like Nostr does. I imagine it would work sort of like a torrent, where we are all sharing and hosting the instance or the communities we use, whether completely or only partially. Or perhaps an instance is made out of multiple relays which are hosted separately. This way, we wouldn't have issues such as admins unilaterally defederating instances because of a disagreement or stuff like that, since we'd all be admins in a way.

I wouldn't want to do away with moderation, but decisions such as who gets to be moderator, who gets to keep being moderator, and who we ban, fed with or defed from, is consulted via democratic process enforced by design. Otherwise, it's not going to be meaningfully different from centralized media once the big instances become big enough.

[–] kplaceholder 3 points 1 year ago

I'm missing r/vexillologycriclejerk. Sure, it always was the same joke for like a month, but it used to be one of the highlights of my daily Reddit experience.

[–] kplaceholder 60 points 1 year ago (8 children)

If they're unaffected by gravity, chances are they don't have mass. If they don't have mass, they're not constrained by the Higgs field, which in turn means that they can never move at any velocity below light speed.

Their unfortunate fate is to roam across all of space at the maximum possible velocity in perpetuity.

[–] kplaceholder 21 points 1 year ago (3 children)

A Lemmy post showing a Mastodon toot covtaining a Bluesky post screenshot

Marvelous

[–] kplaceholder 3 points 1 year ago

Good point. So let's get rid of full-time jobs, reconsider our relationship with work, and improve working conditions everywhere so that people's time spent at their jobs can be shorter and more meaningful.

I'd rather not live under the perpetual threat that losing my pointless job might mean losing everything else. I'd also rather not have the need to preserve full-time jobs in turn justify homelessness.

[–] kplaceholder 31 points 1 year ago (3 children)

I used to run a yay -Syu on my system almost daily.

Now, I run a pacman -Syu once every 2-3 weeks, and I only ever update a package from the AUR if I do need it updated or is there a serious vulnerability.

Turns out I don't have a real need to have my personal system running bleeding edge new software at all times. Sure, the updates are larger, but I no longer feel like risking my system stability on a daily basis. I'm a lot happier this way.

[–] kplaceholder 12 points 1 year ago (2 children)

You pull animal-like creatures from their natural habitats to make them fight each other in a way that they somehow consent, in a franchise that systematically weeds out the good ideas from each game while retaining the bad ones.

[–] kplaceholder 4 points 1 year ago

Yeah, I agree. I just think the decision to defederate should not be taken unilaterally & on a whim by admins. I don't know why it took them so long with exploding heads, but if it was because they were consulting the userbase, I can see a justification for it taking so long. Defederating from Hexbear on the other hand, before telling anyone and even before they have the chance to federate back, is unacceptable IMO

[–] kplaceholder 4 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Same, ever since I joined lemmy.world I had a feeling that they were way too trigger-happy with the defederation button, but I was trying to not pay a lot of mind to it and just assume good faith in the admins. But the Hexvear fiasco was absolute bullshit that made that assumption impossible for me. And I don't even particularly care about Hexbear lol

So I have been visiting other instances and made an alt account on lemmygrad just in case.

[–] kplaceholder 78 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (3 children)

I don't really know the reason, but it would be cool if that screen included a reason for defederation alongside the name of every defederated instance.

That said, wasn't Hexbear using a Lemmy fork that split off really early and then added lots of features of their own, making it particularly incompatible with the rest of the Fediverse? I read somewhere that federating with Hexbear was not possible at the moment and that it's unclear whether it will ever be possible.

Edit: small rephrasing

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