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submitted 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago) by Five@slrpnk.net to c/meta@slrpnk.net

Introduction

Each month we pin a post to give all members an update on the state of the instance, as well as a place to direct public comments and discussions.

New moderators / communities

Anyone who accepts the responsibility outlined in the SLRPNK rules can start their own community on this instance. Several people have started communities in the last month you may want to check out:

Also, @maanskyn of The Radical Storytelling Crew has set up shop on our instance, and while they have not decided how much participation they want from the rest of us, their community !thersc may be something interesting to watch.

Controversy Over !NotVoting

Anarchism is an philosophy of horizontal organization and consensus building. While anarchists have historically taken several positions on engaging in electoral politics, many have and still do view it as a distraction from the grassroots organizing that brings real change. The strongest expression of this tendency is to promote non-involvement in all elections.

Last month, a couple posts expressing this opinion in !anarchism have been downvoted and rage-posted in from accounts outside the !anarchism community. @punkisundead, a long-time contributor and valued member, created !notvoting to try and solve this problem. Whether it will help or merely compound the issue remains to be seen.

In addition to aspiring to be a space where anarchists feel welcome, we are also struggling with the dilemma of how to both encourage good-faith engagement and protect communities from out-group harassment. Lessons learned from @punkisundead's moderation strategies may help us with other communities with similar problems. We recently closed !twoxchromosomes due to lack of moderators to respond to similar abuse.

As admins, we support @punkisundead in holding unpopular but principled positions, and have put the fate of !notvoting in their hands. They've volunteered to discuss their vision for the community with anyone with questions in the comments below.

User Stats

In the last monthly meta, I included a member-requested 'user stats' analysis. Because we switched to Lemmy 0.19 mid-January, the way that activity was reported changed, making the sudden inflection in the activity graph suspect. I thought it would be interesting to check in on that again this month.

Fediverse Observer continues to report an upward trend, though not as steep as it was in January when all the members who voted but didn't post or comment were first added to the count.

The total post count continues its exponential growth pattern from last month, which I interpret as a linear trend of members becoming geometrically more comfortable with using the platform to share news.

As I said last month, our goal is not to be the biggest or best by metrics, but to build a healthy community of support and solidarity. You're all part of an exclusive group. @poVoq has expressed the intention to limit membership at a certain point so that the community doesn't get too big - so ultimately the success of SLRPNK will be judged by what its members are enabled learn and build with the help of this community.

It's nice to see numbers going up, but what is important to us is mostly intangible. I'm pretty happy with the vibe of this instance, and your words of kindness and encouragement are well-received and appreciated.

Community Pruning

When gardening, it's customary to remove weaker or redundant branches to give healthy branches more room to expand, and allow the crop to focus resources on growing bigger fruit with less plant. We've been doing this throughout our tenure as admins to local communities that are both inactive and unmoderated so that it is easier for people to find active and engaging communities on SLRPNK, and reduce our attack profile for spam and trolling.

Usually there's some discussion in Movim chat, attempts to contact the moderators, and we're now listing the communities on the Loomio forum so members can stay abreast of what communities are in the shears. The following communities will be pruned next month unless their moderators return or someone steps up to moderate them.

We're also pruning some long-unmoderated communities that are significant enough that we considered them worthy of their own !meta posts:

Discussion of those communities future should happen in the CornelWest2024 pruning post and the TwoXChromosomes pruning post.

Open discussion

It's now your turn to tell us what's new! Any topic related to this community, our infrastructure, or the Fediverse at large is fair game. If you've created a new community, this is a great thread to tell us about it. All comments will get extra visibility up until the beginning of next month. Got questions? Ask'em!

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[-] wildcherry@slrpnk.net 2 points 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago)

@silence7 banned me from c/climate. I do not want to be confrontational and I do want to talk this through but I found it quite questionable to use your power as mod to push a specific political party from a specific country, that is well known for cultural imperialism and its primary role in the very problem at hand. Climate change will impact all of us, so I do not think you have the right to appropriate the climate struggle for electoral reasons. US politics (and representative democracy in general imho) does not belong in general space.

I came here specifically to have good-faithed discussion. I am sorry if I made anybody feel unheard. For what it worth I found it a bit saddening.

[-] poVoq@slrpnk.net 11 points 8 months ago

/c/climate is a very active and highly externally subscribed community that is focussing on news, not in depth commentary or political discussions. This has been the case since its inception and I have not seen a shift to mainly covering US based electoral news, other than that obviously an English speaking community will have a lot of articles from current events in the US.

I didn't follow this specific situation in detail, but I now see quite a few removed and highly down-voted comments from you in that community.

From the perspective of a moderator of such a community, a person that makes highly controversial and down-voted comments is indistinguishable from a troll (which is the reason given for your ban) regardless if they do it intentionally or not. Seeing this happen several times and having to clean up the heated discussions afterwards is very mentally draining and the quickest way to put an end to this is banning the account that starts these discussions (which any way add little to a community about sharing news and articles).

That said, as a general policy we admins try to stay out of individual community's moderation decisions unless absolutely necessary, which I don't think is the case here. But maybe if you had started non-US centric posts in the community instead of criticising others for sharing theirs from the US, this would have not happened? Be the change you want to see 😊

[-] LibertyLizard@slrpnk.net 1 points 8 months ago

I do have concerns about bans being justified by “trolling” and it’s precisely because of what you said. Often unpopular views are indistinguishable and falsely accused of trolling when the user had no intention of causing negative reactions. This has led to its abuse in many online communities as an excuse to silence viewpoints not in line with the majority or even worse, those in power. In addition, its subjectivity also invites arguments like this where there is no way to know for certain who was or wasn’t trolling.

I suggest that the most effective moderation policy would eliminate ambiguity by referring explicitly to objective behavior and statements, and not a concept involving a poster’s state of mind, which is fundamentally unknowable.

Most of the comments removed for trolling are hostile or rude and could instead be removed for those reasons which can be more widely agreed upon. However, I do see some bans that seems questionable solely on the basis of what’s visible in the modlog.

[-] poVoq@slrpnk.net 7 points 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago)

I don't really get what you propose. Just not calling it "trolling", but something else? That doesn't seem to be anything but cosmetics if the end result is the same.

Also writing a more detailed explanation why something that was obviously disruptive and borderline trolling was banned is a lot more effort and usually results in the troll taking that as an invitation to troll even more by demanding further explanations why (aka sealioning).

I guess that some people genuinely have bad social skills or otherwise fail to understand why their behaviour is not appreciated in a community, but you also have to see the side of a moderator in popular communities who doesn't only get to deal with such situations now and then but constantly all the time.

There is a certain asymmetry to all this. For regular participants it rarely happens and then seems like a big deal, while for moderators it happens daily and patience starts to thin out after a short while.

[-] LibertyLizard@slrpnk.net 1 points 8 months ago

It’s not about 1 to 1 replacing it with some other term or writing detailed justifications. It’s about having clear, well-defined rules that have specific terms that can be pointed to. Trolling is just not specific or objective enough of a term to fit into such a framework. My experience is that a significant fraction, perhaps even a majority of what is termed trolling online is not intended as such. And what you think is obvious is not always obvious to the community, so having clearer terms helps people to have trust in moderation actions.

I am sympathetic to the difficulties of moderation which is a thankless but necessary job. However, if moderators find that their patience is wearing thin, that suggests a need for more mods. It should not be used as an excuse for behavior that is demonstrably causing arguments and complaints.

[-] jonuno@slrpnk.net 0 points 7 months ago

name it climateNews then

[-] wildcherry@slrpnk.net -1 points 8 months ago

Half of the post I get on the frontpage is @silence7 spam about Biden -_-

[-] Five@slrpnk.net 5 points 8 months ago

The Lemmy platform allows you to block users, preventing their posts and comments from appearing in your feed. Have you tried using this feature?

[-] wildcherry@slrpnk.net 2 points 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago)

It goes beyond that. I am not ethically comfortable in a space that have been appropriated by american centrists who speak about solving climate change by giving tax breaks and offsetting carbon using the market. This is beyond me. I do not want to be complicit of this. Maybe you should not let obviously bad-faithed state actors roam free on your instance.

[-] activistPnk@slrpnk.net -2 points 8 months ago

Sounds like silence7 needs to be made aware of that feature.

[-] poVoq@slrpnk.net 5 points 8 months ago

As a community moderator that is the opposite of what you would want to do and the sole reason why Lemmy introduced the "moderator view" to allow moderators to block users and still be able to see their post for moderating them.

[-] activistPnk@slrpnk.net 1 points 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago)

Well, it sounded good as I writing it but indeed the moderator needs to see everything. I guess the problem is the moderator in this case is just too emotionally triggered to serve as an impartial arbitrator of the rules on the climate topic.

I can understand that it’s useful to have an energetic and engaged moderator but maybe some moderators should have a moderator of their own to review and overturn their overcorrective actions. In principle the modlog needs an alert button so people can request a 2nd review.

this post was submitted on 01 Mar 2024
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