• @[email protected]
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    91 year ago

    [email protected] was the 15th largest community in the fediverse with 19k subscribers, and then the mods conspired with the r/android mods to lock that community and move it to [email protected]. All of this was done with no input from the users subscribed there.

    That of course led to a flame thread yesterday, and a whole bunch of debate about whether [email protected] should be reopened or not. It appears to be locked still, so not sure how that debate ended.

    But I said it shows how fragile communities are because that was about as blatantly obvious of a community snatch as there possibly could be. Like 10 mods got in a room and said “let’s just move this huge community to a new instance” and it worked. There’s no way we’re going to stop Meta if we can’t even stop that.

    • @[email protected]
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      21 year ago

      Yeah that was sending off a lot alarms in my head. Idk it’s just so disappointing to see but lemmy is still strong for now

    • @Jackolantern
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      21 year ago

      Did the mods have a reason why they did that?

    • @hitmyspot
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      11 year ago

      How does that work from a user perspective? If they were subscribed to [email protected] , would the subscription transfer over to the new community without them realising, or would they need to manually subscribe?

      I don’t have a problem with communities being able to move. The users should be notified and have the option to transfer too or leave. Over time, the values may diverge.

      I also think the power should rest with the mods to do so. However, it would be wise for them to consult the community. For larger communities, you’ll likely never have consensus, so someone needs to be able to decide. If any instance became hostile or overrun by undesirables, moving would make sense.

      I imagine the current threat from meta will be divisive and some communities values may differ from the instance they are on.