Citiverse
  • johannab@cosocial.caJ
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    @evan

    Oh, I suppose a third reason these work well in the specific Ravelry community is that it is actively and collaboratively moderated and has a very simple but well laid out Code of Conduct. And a longstanding culture of everyone there being on board with a clear understanding of what those buttons mean - "Disagree" is to be taken as referring to the objective content of a post, such as "the BEST way to knit is Continental" being something one can disagree with.

  • evan@cosocial.caE
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    @bipolaron It's OK if you don't understand.

  • johannab@cosocial.caJ
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    @evan It's very hard to be an asshole on Ravelry because the other 10,999,999 users either won't acknowledge your existence, or if you're forcing them to do so, they will not only put you in the corner with no privileges, but they will likely find your mother, your grandmother and every auntie who ever taught you a thing about knitting and they will get you flat-out grounded or beaten with a flipflop until you smarten up.

    Knitters should be consulted for any community management plan, srsly.

  • sus@timeloop.cafeS
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    @bipolaron but every favourite makes me feel seen and liked! like eye contact or a smile!

  • bipolaron@scholar.socialB
    3
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    @sus I do like that little bit, though I feel like I'd boost more if it weren't an option. I think I don't understand the original poll because it must be about a kind of instance I'm not on and have never heard of.

    I didn't realize any mastodon instances were more like a reddit in this way, if that's what was meant, sounds very different for sure.

  • groupnebula563@mastodon.socialG
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    @bipolaron @sus there’s other software (not mastodon but still Fediverse integrated) like lemmy and PieFed that does operate like Reddit

  • bipolaron@scholar.socialB
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    @GroupNebula563 @sus oh yeah, I forgot about lemmy. honestly kinda thought it died out but I'm sure the same has been said of mastodon and pixelfed infinity times. go lemmy!

  • cmsdengl@mas.toC
    2
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    @evan You only need dislike to feed algorithms not people. Keep Mastodon people friendly.

  • liilliil@mastodon.onlineL
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    @evan That's why you should consider the opinion of those you trust, not just anyone. Maybe

  • quinn@social.circl.luQ
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    @evan @benbrown reddit is also terrible 😂

  • evan@cosocial.caE
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    @quinn @benbrown it's a lot better than if all those downvoted comments were visible.

  • evan@cosocial.caE
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    @cmsdengl 1) Fediverse, not Mastodon 2) the algorithm is as simple as "things that are highly downvoted should be hidden by default".

  • owlyph@cosocial.caO
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    @evan I see the appeal for distributed moderation but am unsure a dislike button could accomplish it. I recall Slashdot (though haven't used it in a long time) had descriptive words that could be "voted' on, which made filtering for certain qualities (e.g. looking for expertise) possible. I fear that a dislike button could lead to "downvoting" stuff without consideration and maybe diminish interaction. Liking adds a positive feeling but I don't want to put effort into disliking people's stuff.

  • evan@cosocial.caE
    119
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    @owlyph I think the key use case is a popular post with a lot of comments. Many of the responses will be bad -- mansplaining, hostile, etc. Without a dislike button, the original poster or another commenter has to reply to the post, explaining for the umpteenth time why mansplaining is unacceptable (or whatever). This puts the conversation into a he-said-she-said mode, where the OP has to argue for why the behaviour is wrong.

  • evan@cosocial.caE
    119
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    @owlyph A dislike button, on the other hand, gives instant, distributed, low-friction feedback. It shifts the effort from the OP to the community, and it gives the OP a sense of collective support: "We all know why this sucks."

  • owlyph@cosocial.caO
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    @evan I see how that makes sense and that sounds like it could unburden people in some ways. I worry about a sort of mob mentality too that might not give legitimate comments a chance... seems like something I've seen happen on Reddit occasionally. Maybe the trade-off in risk would be worth it. Maybe there's also a distinction in having such a button on replies to a post versus having it on the original post.

  • cmsdengl@mas.toC
    2
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    @evan I expect a patronising response and wasn't disappointed. Muted.

  • evan@cosocial.caE
    119
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    @owlyph I think we have an advantage over Reddit in that each person has an audience outside the thread. I can say something that's important to me, and even if it's not seen in the thread because it's unpopular there, it would still be seen by my followers, who by definition want to hear what I have to say. I think the follow graph in Reddit exists, but it's much less important than the forum-style posting.

  • evan@cosocial.caE
    119
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    @cmsdengl Muting is another great peer moderation algorithm!


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