• @JonsJavaM
    link
    112 days ago

    Because this instance (and all other instances) physically reside in countries with content laws. If we don’t follow those laws, we can be shut down, and the admin/owners that reside in those countries could face legal consequences.

    • @zergtoshi
      link
      English
      132 days ago

      Yeah, it’s a pity that the laws appear to be protecting those the best, who are responsible for the most suffering - after all those have the power to get those laws written.
      But that’s the thing: there’s a difference between ‘legal’ and ‘legitimate/true’ behaviour.
      While I understand that lemmy instances (et al) have to adhere to legal behaviour, I hope that people adhere to legitimate/true behaviour.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        62 days ago

        Most people don’t just randomly stumble into legitimate/true behavior. We’re apes, we see something and then do. If it all gets moderated away, the chance for legitimate/true behavior drops dramatically.

        • @zergtoshi
          link
          English
          22 days ago

          I very much hope that action is the outcome of thorough consideration, although oftentimes I have doubts about that.
          And still I think we have more up our sleeves than ‘monkey see, monkey do’ schemes.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          12 days ago

          Don’t forget that capitalism is what you get when you don’t regulate behavior.

          Humans are shitty animals.

      • @JonsJavaM
        link
        English
        -32 days ago

        Nope. I remove comments that say “this guy needs the Luigi treatment” or things to that effect.

        The guy is innocent until proven guilty. Using his name as a drop in for “kill someone” is advocating violence/murder.

        pre-trial imprisonment is a legal process, as is imprisonment post conviction (if that is the case), therefore people opinioning that someone should face consequences for a crime they committed (again, if that is the case) breaks no rules.

        Also, people opinioning if a person is innocent or guilty is not against any rules. It’s not misinformation, as it’s an opinion.

        Furthermore, your very flimsy argument that “it’s a violent act” carries no weight. While you are correct that the U.S. correctional institution needs…correction, if you don’t have a valid alternative that can be implemented now, you’re just pissing in the wind.

        • Dragon Rider (drag)
          link
          fedilink
          English
          42 days ago

          Okay, so advocating for violence is perfectly allowed if the violence is legal.

          Is it allowed to say that gay Saudi Arabians should be put to death? That is the law in Saudi Arabia. It’s a legal form of violence, state sponsored and everything.

          If an American cop kills someone and gets acquitted, is it legal to say their victim deserved to die and the cops should kill more people the same legal way?

          Is it allowed to say that North Koreans who criticise Kim Jong Un deserve to be imprisoned?

          • @JonsJavaM
            link
            English
            -42 days ago

            is there a point to this?

            My original comment was that we have to moderate to keep the site from being taken down. All these arguments change nothing.

            It feels like an attack, but I’ll leave that to others to decide.

            • @[email protected]
              link
              fedilink
              22 days ago

              Sounds like they just want clarification on what is/is not okay. I had similar questions. It’s not related to the Luigi situation but is saying someone should be executed by the state advocating violence? I was banned from reddit because of inconsistent moderation on that topic.

              • @JonsJavaM
                link
                English
                12 days ago

                Sadly, moderation is done by humans, and each person has their own way of moderating. This is why I generally don’t interact in communities I moderate - helps me distance myself from the content I get reports for. I try to look at the rules, and treat them as a “living document” - one that lists the guidelines, but with the understanding it’s the spirit, not the letter that matters at times.

                I’ve been moderating this community for a year, and I’ll admit - it’s hard. Moderate too much, and I’m a tyrant. Moderate too little, and “you let every Nazi say what they want here”.

                I’m still working on a balance that works best.

                • Refurbished Refurbisher
                  link
                  fedilink
                  22 days ago

                  Is lemmy.world hosted in the USA? The US has extremely strong first amendent protections for speech, except for things such as hate speech and direct threats of violence.

                  Being in support of someone being killed or someone who has been killed is not legally considered to be a direct threat of violence, because that person is not saying they themselves will commit the violence, just that they hope someone else will.

                  • @JonsJavaM
                    link
                    English
                    32 days ago

                    No. As outlined in this document:

                    The website and the agreement will be governed by and construed per the laws of the following countries and/or states:

                    • The Netherlands
                    • Republic of Finland
                    • Federal Republic of Germany