• @[email protected]
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      631 month ago

      Having an architecture that locks communities to an instance is a problem. They should be distributed across the network with no notion of a home instance.

        • @[email protected]
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          171 month ago

          Moderation is also just an event in the protocol, just like votes or comments. Your instance would simply have to aggregate all those events, just like the current “home instances” do for their communities.

          • @jimmy90
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            11 month ago

            does ActivityPub disallow this at all?

            • @[email protected]
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              41 month ago

              No. ActivityPub is intentionally open/non-restrictive.

              Essentially, tags in mastodon are already what I described, just without moderation.

        • @[email protected]
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          -41 month ago

          It would be different. The end-user would have to moderate their feeds, they’d have to find the same community provided by platform hosts who align with the users moderation values, or be ok with hiding content themselves.

          • Blaze (he/him)
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            401 month ago

            Isn’t that the way Nostr works, and thus if full of alt-right trolls escaping moderation?

          • @[email protected]
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            201 month ago

            The end-user would have to moderate their feeds

            Ah yes, I love a feed where I have to view and delete the alt-right trolls and CSAM myself.

          • OpenStars
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            1 month ago

            PieFed (the non-tankie Lemmy alternative written in Python rather than Rust) allows for that. Atm it’s fairly primitive unless you make your own instance but ultimately it democratizes the moderation process to allow the end user what they want to see or not. Like instead of “remove” or “allow” content, it can automatically be “collapsed” with an option to uncollapse it whenever someone chooses. And/or labels can be placed next to usernames - like “<2 week old account” or “has 10x more downvotes than upvotes” - except it is actually icons that are used rather than such long phrases. You can put custom icons of any type next to any individual user that you want, for any reason - e.g. to help their comments stand out as you scroll, or to remind you to be careful replying, or whatever custom reason you chose to remind yourself of.

            Edit: and all that I’ve said here is already available. So I guess it’s not so primitive after all, especially when keyword filters get added (new features appear all the time - it being in Python makes its development cycle FAST!), but what I meant is that even more is planned, to further reduce the manual burden of moderation efforts. Also, the entire sidebar appears below every single post, unlike in some apps where it it quite buried behind several clicks. It’s not fully ready for the masses yet but it’s coming along nicely, and already has several features that Lemmy lacks (and vice versa unfortunately).

            Edit 2: based on db0’s comment, I should mention that PieFed also has Mastodon style tags too, on top of not only communities but on top of that too there are Categories of Communities. This is getting confusing to describe so just look at this example - the hierarchy above the post shows the Categories, the tags are below it, and the YouTube link is natively embedded in between.

            • @hark
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              71 month ago

              Yeah but it’s written in Python.

              • OpenStars
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                11 month ago

                Which will lead to faster development?

                Or are you saying that the code will be shittier as a result? I do wonder about that, but also if the errors can get made quickly enough and then resolved, the overall process could still end up being faster?:-P

                • @hark
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                  51 month ago

                  Just joking since I’m not a fan of Python’s design choices, but I do worry that as development goes on the tech debt will pile up and will be more difficult to maintain.

                  • OpenStars
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                    11 month ago

                    Is that because Python breaks everything seemingly every time it updates? I don’t know Python well, that’s just what I seem to hear people saying often.

                    If so, would it really matter so much in this case, bc it’s not code running on clients so much as a handful of server machines, so couldn’t the specific library version used be mentioned and constrained to be used?

        • @Mojave
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          -61 month ago

          Probably better than whatever batshit moderation happens right now on the tankie instances

      • db0
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        221 month ago

        That’s just mastodon tags

      • @AdrianTheFrog
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        91 month ago

        Then you run into problems with instance admins disagreeing over moderation

        • @SoftTeeth
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          01 month ago

          Either you have global moderation rules or communities will leave the instances with bad and inconsistent mods

          • @AdrianTheFrog
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            31 month ago

            if communities don’t have a home instance, how do they leave the instances with bad mods? would this mean that different communities can federate independently, as determined by community moderators?

            • @SoftTeeth
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              11 month ago

              This is a situation where I see a community leaving an instance with bad moderation.

              I don’t like .world but it’s the best instance I’ve found so far

      • Blaze (he/him)
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        71 month ago

        They still to be attached to an instance at the protocol level. Or you have instances which are barely network components rather than communities, but that’s not what ActivityPub is about

        • @[email protected]
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          21 month ago

          And that’s a problem.

          However, there’s nothing stopping a developer from extending the protocol to support it. You can essentially throw a message into the fediverse with more or less arbitrary payloads. Adding something like a feed/community identifier is not impossible.