Hello everyone!
I’m having a hard time making this post as I’ve been so thankful for this awesome instance and the people in it and don’t want to sound ungrateful or start any unnecessary drama or controversy.
I’m thinking about setting up a recurring donation through opencollective but first wanted to try to make sure that I’m not supporting something that I’ll later regret.
I’ve been reading some worrying reports of sensorship from some of the major instances and political affiliations of some core people in the Lemmy project.
I’m of course all for everyone being able to voice their opinion (ofc. excluding harrasment, personal attacks etc.) but sensorship of critical posts (from reliable sources) about any organization/state/nation is kind of a dealbreaker for me. I sincerely hope that these reports are false.
The mastodon.world code of conduct starts with the goal: Provide a friendly, safe, and welcoming environment for everyone regardless of gender identity or expression, sexual orientation, disability, personal appearance, body size, race, ethnicity, age, religion, nationality, political affiliation, or other similar characteristic.
Which sounds fantastic, but I’m interested in hearing if people have experienced any kind of censorship or other weird meddling with posts made on this instance or the mastodon.world one?
-Edit- Just wanted to clarify one more thing (sorry for the long post): I have NOT heard any reports of such activities in this instance (lemmy.world)
Note that at least some moderation actions federate. I don’t think you can read a modlog and attribute all those actions to the admins of the instance you’re looking at. At least some will from community mods on other instances managing their communities. Some may or may not be from admins on other instances where user bans get replicated.
I’m pretty fuzzy on moderation and federation in general, except to say that I’m quite certain the modlogs are tricky to read. I still do look at them to try to understand instance moderation, but I find it hard to be confident in what I learn.