These are all me:

  • @cerevant@lemmy.world
  • @cerevant@fanaticus.social
  • @cerevant@lemm.ee

I control the following bots:

  • @philly_philly@lemmy.world
  • @philly_bot@fanaticus.social
  • 0 Posts
  • 171 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
cake
Cake day: June 10th, 2023

help-circle






  • You will find that very often the scams, advice, self-help, doctrine, etc that draw these populations have one thing in common: if whatever it is doesn’t work, it is because you are doing it wrong, not because the guidance is bad. That’s why conservatives will defend the tax rates of people who have 5 orders of magnitude more wealth than they do - they believe that it is their own fault they aren’t rich, and that anyone can become rich if they just try hard enough. It is why religious conservatives will still attack birth control in the face of their own kids having unwanted pregnancies. It is why natural medicine people will defend their practices even after it sends them to the hospital. They are more willing to believe that they themselves are at fault than the principles they believe in.










  • While I agree there should be functionality to propagate changes to a community between instances when the host is offline, there is no practical way to share administrative control of a community. Any decision by an administrator to sanction a community or defederate an instance will just result in exactly the fragmentation you fear.

    The real solution is for small groups of communities with similar interests to gather on separate instances with few or no users. Meanwhile, other instances gather users with few or no local communities. This maximizes the benefits of cacheing community content while minimizing the impact of defederation. If a community host can no longer be maintained by its owner, that ownership can be easily transferred without transferring the burden of hosting hundreds of communities or supporting user logins.



  • No, and the difference between Beehw and Lemmy.world is why. Different people have different views about moderation and what is acceptable content.

    There are two solutions to the real problem of duplicate content:

    1. Multireddit - like functionality for grouping similar content.
    2. Making crossposting a reference to the original post, not a copy. Mods would need to be able to block crossposts from specific communities, and remove crossposts to their sub.