This account is being kept for the posterity, but it won’t see further activity past February.

If you want to contact me, I’m at /u/lvxferre@mander.xyz

  • 3 Posts
  • 147 Comments
Joined 3 years ago
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Cake day: April 9th, 2021

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  • If you want, you could use GMail filters to delete those emails automatically. Here’s how:

    1. click the engine button (settings), then “see all settings”, then “filters and blocked addresses”.
    2. click “create a new filter”. Add “top of Google search” to the field “has the words”, leave other fields blank.
    3. click “create filter”, then check the “delete it” box, then “create filter” again.
    4. repeat steps 2-3 for other shit that SEO spam is likely to mention.

    Important: never use as a filter anything that legitimate users might reasonably say. Only things that you’re fairly certain to come from a spammer.

    EDIT: I repeated two steps without noticing it. My bad.


  • Lvxferre@lemmy.mltoTechnology@lemmy.mlTransparent Aluminium
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    9 months ago

    Misleading name, on the same level as calling water “non-explosive hydrogen”. That said the material looks promising, as a glass replacement for some applications (the text mentions a few of them, like armoured windows).

    (It is not a metal; it’s a ceramic, mostly oxygen with bits and bobs of aluminium and nitrogen. Interesting nonetheless, even if I’m picking on the name.)




  • “Content not found in lemmy.ml’s single instance is not present in lemmy.ml as a whole at all”

    A more accurate equivalence would be “Content not found in the lemmy.ml instance might be found elsewhere in Lemmy.” I’m talking about the federation vs. the lack of.

    It’s not like Reddit represents the entire Internet, IDK why you’re giving them special treatment to exclude content without criticism.

    I did not claim (or even imply) that “Reddit represents the whole internet”. And I am not “giving them special treatment to exclude content without criticism”. It is just that this content exclusion and the criticism are not relevant in the context of this discussion.

    I heavily encourage you to re-read the title of the post (just the title is enough), for context, and contrast it with your own comment. Do it. Please.



  • It’s interesting how, by hosting your own instance, your view over Lemmy changes. I hope that self-hosters like you become more common.

    I would rewrite the second sentence into “As such, content it doesn’t like is not possible to be hosted on their single, general-purpose instance.”

    Or rather, “content not found in their single instance is not present in Reddit as a whole at all”.

    That’s the point here - it’s true for Reddit but false for Lemmy, as content available in one instance doesn’t need to be hosted yet again in another.

    Instance creation and management does not require coding skills. It’s a very different skill set, one of system administration and web hosting.

    I phrased it poorly. What I tried to convey is that easier instance creation and management should be a priority for coders, so other people have an easier time hosting/managing their Lemmy instances.

    That [interface devs should expect users to have 2+ accounts] is just a ugly workaround, I hope we can come up with something better.

    Ugly workaround or not, I believe that this would be still sensible given the current state of Lemmy. Because when people want content from non-federated instances, here are their current solutions:

    • Register on both, and keep two separated and partially overlapping feeds. It’s a bother, and eventually they will ditch the smaller feed.
    • Look for an instance that happens to federate with both, and register there. That may or may not federate with a fourth instance with desirable content.
    • Register on one and give up the other. Usually the one getting the short end of the stick is single-purpose, smaller, or more careful on whom they federate with.

    So the current state of the things actively encourages you to hop into big, general-purpose instances. That is bad for the federation, and it aggravates the “three groups to rule you, three sets of rules to follow” problem.

    Do you happen to have an alternative for this idea? Preferably, one that would work with the Lemmyverse now?






  • Then join an instance where scores are disabled if you don’t like them. :shurg:

    Already addressed - a lot of those issues will still affect you, even if you don’t use the karma system.

    Let’s say that instances A (karma disabled) and B (karma enabled) federate. A users won’t get the karma system itself, but they’ll still get: less varied and less interesting content, stronger echo chambers, and higher concentration of users in oversized and unruly comms. Because they use the same comms as the B users and thus the behaviour of B users affect A.

    Choosing an instance where downvotes are disabled is already a preference, so making the score aggregates optional is completely in line with that.

    Downvotes are a mixed feature, with pros and cons.
    Karma looks good from a distance, but upon closer inspection it’s only cons. (Including enabling shitty=assumptive mod practices.)

    You’re already on .ml, so…

    I am clearly not talking about my individual usage here. I’m talking about users in general and the Lemmyverse as a whole.

    The whole shtick of Lemmy is run your instance the way you want to run it.

    I’m not sure on what’s supposed to be the [ipsis digitis] “whole shtick of Lemmy”, and I’m not assuming it.

    The removal of the scores from the API seems [for me] heavy-handed and feels [for me] like the devs are forcing their preferences/values on others.

    For me it looks like a sensible decision that takes into account its impact into users and the Lemmyverse.

    EDIT: I’ll go further. Dunno if the devs agree with this or not, but I believe that “user aggregate score” = karma also attracts and retains users with the wrong mindset - who are not here to share, contribute or be part of something social and collective; but instead to farm virtual e-peen points for the sake of their individual egos. And I believe that this “it’s all about MEEE! ME! ME!” mindset is part of what makes Reddit such a dumpster fire.


  • I’m a nobody, but I’m officially supporting this decision of the devs to remove karma (user score aggregates) from the API. Because karma brings on a plethora of problems¹:

    • It is gamification of the system. As hinted by their PR, this is not healthy.
    • It leads to less varied and less interesting content, due to the fluff principle.
    • It feeds echo chambers, by giving people yet another reason to not confront them, even when moral and sensible to do so.
    • It shifts the focus from the content to the people, detracting from the experience of what boils down to a bunch of forums.
    • It is yet another reason for people to congregate in oversized and unruly communities, instead of splitting into smaller ones.

    Re-enable it at the API level and continue hiding it in Lemmy-UI if that is your personal stance on the matter.

    A lot of those issues will affect negatively your user experience, regardless of you using the karma feature or not. Simply because other people use it.

    And it’s also the sort of "lead acetate"² feature that makes clueless users annoy the shit out of interface developers, until they add it. “I dun unrurrstand, y u not enable karma? Y u’re app defective lol l mao” style. With app devs eventually caving in.

    As such, “leave it optional” is probably a bad approach.

    Considering how easy it is to spin up troll accounts or amass multiple troll accounts across multiple instances, removing a useful metric for identifying them at a glance is, IMO, irresponsible.

    This is a poor argument. It has some merit in Reddit³, but not in Lemmy.

    You aren’t identifying trolls by karma. You’re assuming that someone is a troll, based on a bad correlation. Plenty users get low karma for unrelated reasons (false positive - e.g. newbie user unknowingly violating some “unspoken rule” of the local echo chamber), and plenty trolls get past your arbitrary karma wall³ (false negative).

    So relying on karma to decide who’s a troll is not as effective as it looks like, and it’s specially unfair to newcomers, thus discouraging the renovation of the community. IMO it’s a damn shitty moderator practice.

    Since trolling is mostly an issue when you get the same obnoxious troll[s] coming back over and over and over, under new accounts, to post gaping anuses again, and mods have no way to detect if the troll came back, mods should be upstreaming this issue to the admins of the instance of their comm - because the admins likely have access to your IP⁴, and can prevent the user from creating a new trolling account every 15 days.

    And, if for some reason the admins are uncaring or uncooperative, the mods should be migrating the comm to another instance.

    What Lemmy needs is not to enable shitty moderation practices. It needs better mod tools to enable good moderation practices:

    • the context of the content being reported should be immediately obvious, no clicks needed
    • there should be a quick way to check all submissions/comments of a user to your community
    • there should be a way to keep notes about users, and share them with the rest of the mod team
    • some automod functionality. Such as automatically reporting (not removing!) content or replying to the user based on a few criteria defined by the mods.

    e.g. #2: If someone posts a particularly toxic comment but their score is high, I’m more likely to read through their history and conclude they’re having a bad day or something. Without the score, I will not read through and likely just ban them and move on.

    IMO this is also a shitty moderation practice. Should I go further on that? [Serious/non-rhetorical question.]

    NOTES:
    1. Since this is already a huge wall of text I didn’t go deep on each of those claims, but I can do so if desired/requested.
    2. It’s sweet but poisonous.
    3. Because in Reddit you can’t “migrate your sub to another Reddit instance”, and the only instance there happens to be administered by arsehats who give no fucks about you or your sub. It’s a dirtier situation that warrants dirtier solutions.
    4. Anecdote exemplifying this claim: from 2020~22 I had multiple trolling accounts in Reddit, to shitpost in cooking subs (for some puzzling reason they’re cesspools). Guess how many times this sort of “you need more karma to post here” barrier locked me out? Zero. It’s simply too easy to comment some shitty one-line in a big community (I used r/askreddit for that) and amass 500, sometimes 2k karma points in a single go.
    5. If instance admins do not have access to the IPs of the users engaging with their instances, regardless of where they registered in, that should be fixed.




  • I believe that most people are here due to the APIcalypse, like you.

    And… really, before that, this place was a ghost town. Then you had all that huge influx of newbies, so Lemmy became actually usable, albeit messy. Now things settled down and, although plenty users still behave like they were in Reddit, I feel like Lemmy already has its own culture.

    I always think of the Koopa kid

    I usually think of this:
    Lemmings, a SNES game
    Fucking Lemmings. I lost a good chunk of my childhood playing it. (I don’t regret it.)


  • [nougat@kbin.social] No idea, I don’t use it.

    Your very comment, that boils down to “I have nothing to contribute but since I’m an entitled prick I’ll still add noise to the discussion” is proof of its own inaccuracy - you’re submitting a[n extremely insightless] comment to a Lemmy thread, created by a Lemmy user in a Lemmy community, while interacting with Lemmy users. You are using Lemmy as a community, even if not using the software.