• @[email protected]
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    43 months ago

    The Lemmy/Reddit moderator structure is a failure. Communities should have democratic governance.

    On this specific issue I think everyone involved needs to take a deep breath, step away from the issue for like 24 hours, and talk to each other respectfully to work out how this should be resolved. But that is just my opinion.

    • Blaze (he/him)
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      73 months ago

      Communities should have democratic governance.

      I’ve seen some instances elect their admins. No mod election yet, but that probably happened somewhere.

      To be fair, as a mod myself, the issue is usually to get potential mod candidates in the first place.

      • @[email protected]
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        43 months ago

        I wonder what kind of structure they used. I’m also a mod mainly because somebody has to be. But my communities are small and not controversial so I haven’t had to do anything controversial either. It’s mostly that I’m willing to keep an eye on things.

        However, maybe I should walk the walk and start thinking about how that might work in case they grow to the point where more moderation becomes necessary.

    • @[email protected]
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      23 months ago

      It would be fantastic to see an automated system, like with X downvotes a post or comment gets hidden, yet all it takes is one extra click to show it so it doesn’t mean much.

      However, the Lemmy devs seem strictly pro-authoritarian so I expect to never see that on Lemmy, unless it is developed and shown to work elsewhere and becomes too popular to ignore. i.e. the power-tripping gods people in charge is baked right in as a feature, not a bug (it would seem).

      But… maybe in Piefed, Sublinks, Mbin, or something else?