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Discord for Japanese-style role-playing game (JRPG) discussion: Seventh Heaven - come say hello!

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Joined 1 个月前
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Cake day: 2025年10月4日

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  • In terms of content moderation? Not in the least. Discord is extremely laissez-faire about it. They intervene when compelled to by law enforcement. I can’t speak to the large server experience, but we’ve run our server for nearly six years and not a single member of staff has ever spoken with anyone at Discord. Every single one of the moderation tools we use are third party.

    As a practical matter, Discord provides the communication infrastructure for us and that’s literally it. Irrelevant to the topic at hand. We could pack up and move it all to Matrix tomorrow and our content moderation experience would be just as centralized (that is to say, it would not be).


  • I don’t think it’s necessarily true that it’s so overly onerous that it must lead to centralization. I’m part of staff on a medium-sized Discord server and we have more than enough coverage to handle objectionable content. As another example, Fediverse instances here have proactively established rules and norms for NSFW content that ensures the communities keep running, and most are still going a few years later after the Reddit exodus exploded their populations.

    It absolutely does make scaling up more expensive, but I’ve gone from a fairly libertarian stance on this to now asserting proper community moderation has become part of the social responsibility corps have now when making these spaces grow to have massive reach. And yes, I don’t think big corps do enough on this topic, and it’s another inequity because it’s really starting to look like new organizations are going to have to be more responsible for what content they allow. But I’m all for coming down hard on the big corps. Everyone got by just fine in the 90’s and 2000’s when they had much, much larger customer support/moderator staffs. “It’s too expensive” is the same garbage excuse used for other forms of enshittification today while these platforms make money hand over fist.


  • Yeah, my phone has productivity timers, my note taking app, temperature controls for my home office, not to mention 2FA and other tools I need. I don’t see myself leaving it in the kitchen.

    That said, reading this did made me think to turn off email push notifications. Fortunately I’m not in a position where I have to reply to emails immediately, so I like the idea of scheduled email time. Honestly don’t know why I didn’t think of that.







  • Woo, nice! I’ve had a lot of ups and downs myself lately, so always good to hear about the wins.

    I’ve shifted my focus to automaticity. The listening practice has continued to be a frustrating disaster, and I decided to drop the focused practice and change gears towards reading–a lot–at an easy level to cement comprehension of upper beginner/lower intermediate grammar structures in my head first. The idea is once easier content becomes more automatic in my head, I’ll have more bandwidth for the additional parallel brain processing power I need when the input is by ear. I’ve already gone through an entire graded reader book which is leading me to think I might have a different problem of being short on content. That’s a better problem to have, I suppose! It should also be easier to find reading than listening material. I also ordered a Japanese folktales book at my local library that I tried a few months ago. It was a tick too difficult for me back then, so it’ll be interesting to see how that goes later this week.

    Automaticity is a really interesting concept, and it applies to the broader skill as well. The past week in general, I’ve found my study to be less draining, now that I’ve stopped planning and started doing the reps. I’m not holding my schedule in my head, or the processes, any of that anymore. Just sitting at my desk and knowing what to do, where my tools are. It gives me the energy to put more time into it.


  • This is where I’ve been at on it. On top of that, the stuff that’s not directly exploiting human actors (like drawn or animated content) or pushing their boundaries is still coming out of studios that aren’t exactly known for healthy work/life balance. To say nothing of the kind of fetish content that might come out of those places too, which surely takes its own toll on creators.

    If we can offload all of that potential trauma onto computers, I’m all for it.







  • I ended up with a similar method. Images are the next step for me. I already tried them with Japan’s prefectures, and I think it really helped what’s kind of a tough slog.

    A couple notes on his process:

    You don’t have to pay the premium for an Anki TTS addon. It’s easy to set up an account with Azure’s API and they have a free tier that is more than enough for this purpose. Requires a credit card on file, but it can always be locked with your bank (or a service like privacy.com).

    AI phrase/sentence generation is an alternative to a Google Translate hook. I’ve got a running AI thread that knows my language level and knows I want silly/goofy/interesting sentences to make them memorable. And if you’re doing i+1 learning, you don’t have to worry about AI hallucination. You can verify the output since the generation is at a comprehensible level for you. I then have it convert it all into a CSV format right there in-thread for the Anki import.



  • Vocab, grammar, and reading are proceeding apace. I made a change this week with Anki to speed up my per-card review time. I realized I was mixing modes a bit, wanting to shadow the voice lines on the cards for speaking practice. I decided instead I’ll set up a more dedicated shadowing practice if I feel what I’m doing with my listening routine isn’t enough. Results were immediate: I cut my daily Anki time by a third, probably more.

    With how much vocab I have lined up, I’m actually thinking now I might go to every day for Anki; I’m six days a week right now. Curious to hear what pace everyone else has. Take a day or two off a week? Or instead reduce the rate of new cards when you need a bit of a break? Review timers wait for no one!

    Speaking of separating my practice modes, ugh. Listening. I’m not happy with it. I started going through a podcast and went back and forth on how I felt about it for a while. The problem is, I’m very behind on listening. It’s like a full tier below my reading. Available research is telling me I want a high comprehensibility level (over 90%) to train my ear on. And it’s hard to find beginner/lower-intermediate content that:

    • Has a transcript readily available
    • Is at a consistent grammar/vocab level for its audience
    • Doesn’t speak too slow
    • Is interesting

    I’ve given up on the last one for now, and am considering up giving up on seeking a specific speech pace, but I’m not sure. The podcast I’ve been listening to, Sakura Tips, has been very inconsistent with grammar patterns. I’m regularly getting upper intermediate and even the occasional advanced grammar structure in the episodes, which is bizarre considering her vocab, pace, and even the topics are obviously geared towards beginners. I finally decided to bail on it and I’m going to do the audio recordings on NHK Easy. It’s frustrating because, in print, those articles stopped being challenging for me long ago (aside from proper names and various esoterica), but my ear seems to need the bootstrapping.