

Yeah, generally downvotes are pretty minimal across the board for sure.
Yeah, generally downvotes are pretty minimal across the board for sure.
Oh, for sure, I understand the distinction. Not seeing downvotes on your own posts is a good measure for reasons stated. I’m just saying also support a more aggressive stance, which is making downvotes off for new server instances, that’s all.
Yes. As a hexbear user where down votes are disabled I find the experience is much more enjoyable. Ideally down votes off would be the default for servers.
Score is relative though. On hexbear we have downvotes disabled. This means we can not down vote but also means down votes do not federate.
Studies have shown that down votes actually have a large psychological impact negatively on the user. Down votes are frankly unproductive. They might also encourage bad behavior, because if your goal is to stir the pot then down votes are a great indicator that it’s working.
On hexbear we operate on a fork of Lemmy. One of the changes is to the active algorithm, which makes posts decay faster then core Lemmy. Since the change things move pretty smoothly on the front page.
An automated system of banning is something primed for abuse. We see this already on other platforms that has trigger mechanisms for banning a user pending review. Its a shoot first ask questions later approach that could be weaponized against people.
Echo chamber is a very loaded term. A safe community is a protected community. To someone intruding on a space that values the community it has built, it might look like bad faith action. However, often the inverse is true, and the intruder is the one acting in bad faith. That could mean they willingly or ignorantly disregard the rules of a space, or are unwilling to listen and understand the perspective of a given space, and simply want to argue.
The value in Lemmy is that you can build and curate the kind of site culture and ultimately network culture you desire. If you do not like that culture, you can anyways find another place to hang out.
As it stands, you can implement your ideas using a bot. One thing definitely lacking on Lemmy is a kind of Auto moderator. It should be remembered though that auto moderator was a community built tool until Reddit assimilated it into the site as a core feature.
Why do you care about seeing downvotes? They’re bad for your health anyway.
Yeah you need dynadns.
The API has an endpoint for marking posts as read. It would be a matter of adding a button to the interface to mark the post as read.
I’m sure if an issue was opened on the Lemmy UI side it could be implemented by someone.
I’m sorry, there is a .yachts TLD?
many such cases.
have fun touching grass nerds!
Anna’s archive.
How does Sonarr and Radarr detect what files are the correct episodes?
It would be the death of this side of the federated internet. The amount of content it would generate once federated would crush existing servers. You would have to defederate or face near instant storage shortages. The federated que would take years to sync.
Anyway, it wouldn’t happen because they would need to transmit real vote counts instead of fuzzy vote counts. You would be able to see how every single person on reddit voted. Which would simply expose the vote manipulation going on there.
These guides are very well timed! I just bought a NAS for the home network.
Turn all land into public land disposing it from corporate ownership.
At one point, Jetflicks claimed to host more than 183,200 TV episodes.
Look what they took from you!
Pull requests are welcome.
@[email protected] When I type @ I get a user picker in the text interface that autocompletes the username, and then it just generates the link in Markdown. The link does not need to be generated in Markdown, just typing out that syntax will ping the user. The markdown is required, so users can click the link and view the person’s profile. That user will get a notification in their inbox.
Typing ! and then the name of the comm does a similar thing [email protected]. It will also format it in Markdown, but again, not required because that syntax will be changed into a localized link to the comm.
Localized comment links currently are not a thing, but it is an active discussion. You can view that discussion here: https://github.com/LemmyNet/lemmy/issues/2987 and the underlying issue that causes the lack of localized comment links here: https://github.com/LemmyNet/lemmy/issues/1101
I mean, the poster is one of the two lead developers of the Lemmy platform. He might get a pass.
is Piefed a front end or simply a compatible activitypub service?