Because for some piracy isn’t simply about being a cheapskate but also about activism
Because for some piracy isn’t simply about being a cheapskate but also about activism
If people want to crawl back into Meta’s clutches I’m not going to stop them. Don’t give the one nice thing we have to a corporation that only wants to exploit us.
This is not exactly true.
It’s not that the votes don’t count, it’s that Reddit uses a particular technique where the karma you see is randomly modified every time to make it impossible to see if your vote has an effect.
The goal is to prevent bots from realizing when they have been shadow banned. It makes it easier to control automated vote manipulation since bots will just make a new account if they realize they’re banned.
We need Accidental Renaissance here
In a text post, yeah. Not in a link post
Political compasses are stupid anyway.
It’s a political torus. Walk of one end and you end up in the other
They are not power tripping, if you’ve read their posts you’d know that they have a very concrete view of the story of community they want to build and unfortunately their manpower and moderation tools just don’t allow them to stick to it while staying federated with rapidly growing communities.
Users are people capable of making their own choices. It they don’t like the moderation approach they can just make a new account elsewhere. You don’t get to tell them what they like.
Let’s assume that everyone who upvoted their option also downvoted the alternative.
The group A, has |A| number of individuals. Group B has |B| number.
Option A: |A| - |B|
Option B: |B| - |A|
Option A = |A| - |B|
= -(-(|A| - |B|))
= -(|B| - |A|)
= -Option B
The results would be opposites of each other and would highlight the opinion of the majority anyway.
This is the thing that excites me the most about the fediverse. If we can keep it from being monopolized by corporations, it will become a reflection of what the old internet used to be.
That’s for redistribution rights. GDPR is for protection of personal information and applies regardless of their terms of service. Some US states have similar laws.
You can hit them with a GDPR request regardless of your place of residence. But, if they fail to comply, you can only escalate if you are in the EU.
This is hearsay, but I believe it is temporary until better moderation features are developed and user influx shows down.
It’s not about the servers, it’s about moderation. They have a clear vision of what their instance should be like but they don’t have the tools not moderators to make it so while getting traffic from other big instances
Email works, or used to until giant corporations consolidated hundreds of small providers into a handful. I don’t know why it wouldn’t work for this.
Sure, the average user doesn’t care how it works. That doesn’t mean they can’t use it as intended anyway.
Those were friendly exclamation marks. Not angry ones.
I can live with that. Actually, I would be happy with that if that means those power users will be coming here.
They are not trying to burn it down. They don’t care about those who leave. Reddit wants to be the new TikTok and those who leave over stuff like this are only getting in the way.
Yeah, I don’t know how it was for others but, for me, Reddit was hella confusing when I first joined it.
It’ll take a while but it seems like this is a place I can settle in. And, even if it isn’t, I do like the idea of the fediverse and I think I’ll stick around to see it grow in one platform or another.
So far the mobile site is way better than Reddit.
That is such a low bar tho. The Reddit mobile site is the only thing worse than the official app.
They have done so already for a few subs where a few of the mods were willing to budge. In others, all mods were removed and the subs were made restricted.