this post was submitted on 23 Nov 2024
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Hexbear Proposals chapo.chat matrix room.

This will be a place for site proposals and discussion before implementation on the site.
Every proposal will also be mirrored into a pinned post on the hexbear community.

Any other ideas for helping to integrate the two spaces are welcome to be commented here or messaged to me directly.

Within Hexbear Proposals you can see the history of all site proposals and react to them, indicating a vote for or against a proposal.

Sending messages will be restricted to verified and active hexbear accounts older than 1 month with their matrix id in their hexbear user profile.

All top level messages within the channel must be a Proposals (idea for changing the site), Feedback (regarding non-technical aspects of the site, for technical please use https://hexbear.net/c/feedback), or Appeals (regarding admin/moderator actions).

Discussion regarding these will be within nested threads under the post.

To gain matrix verification, all you need to do is navigate to my hexbear userprofile and click the send a secure private message including your hexbear username.

founded 4 years ago
MODERATORS
 

"Imperialism leaves behind germs of rot which we must clinically detect and uproot from our land but from our minds as well." - Frantz Fanon

Hello users of Hexbear, the intent of this announcement is two-fold the first is that we would like to do another community moderator drive, if you have a community idea or want to help an existing one then please send an application either through hexbear or matrix direct message.

The call for new mods is crucial to our efforts to reduce racism and misogyny on the site, we need users to report and enough mods to be able to quickly act on the reports throughout the day and night. Also, CW or content warnings are essential to the safe browsing of Hexbear.

In addition, comments or posts removed for racist or misogyny will also be accompanied by escalating temporary bans. Upvotes will not be the single reason for a ban, however they may be used in conjunction with other posts/comments/upvotes. Consider this post the warning, however, mods are encouraged to reach out to hexbear users before a long duration ban.

The second is to increase transparency with regard to the site while not repeating the mistakes of previous attempts that were ultimately counterproductive, in part due to wreckers.

Previous attempts to increase site transparency and user participation were targeted by wreckers through increasing the intensity and frequency of struggle session drama.

Using matrix's increased level of user permissions as an anti-wrecking measure while having an increased barrier to sending messages with a clear process to gaining the ability to send messages, we hope to mitigate wrecking attempts.

Leading to the creation of the Hexbear Proposals chapo.chat matrix room.

This will be a place for site proposals and discussion before implementation on the site.
Every proposal will also be mirrored into a pinned post on the hexbear community. Any other ideas for helping to integrate the two spaces are welcome to be commented here or messaged to me directly.

Within Hexbear Proposals you can see the history of all site proposals and react to them, indicating a vote for or against a proposal.

Sending messages will be restricted to verified and active hexbear accounts older than 1 month with their matrix id in their hexbear user profile.

All top level messages within the channel must be a Proposals (idea for changing the site), Feedback (regarding non-technical aspects of the site, for technical please use https://hexbear.net/c/feedback), or Appeals (regarding admin/moderator actions).

Discussion regarding these will be within nested threads under the post.

To gain matrix verification, all you need to do is navigate to my hexbear userprofile and click the send a secure private message including your hexbear username.

In closing, I want to state that this site would not exist without the volunteer labor of the moderators, who I am deeply grateful for.

I would also like to take this moment to remind people that lemmy direct messages are not encrypted, and finally please use this post to discuss these changes, share community ideas, or express interest in moderation.

Application

What is your Hexbear username?

Do you have any preferred pronouns?

What are your thoughts on capitalism?

What are your thoughts on imperialism?

What are your thoughts on trans rights?

What are your thoughts on racial justice?

What do think about current and previous protests around the world?

What are your thoughts on Veganism and Animal Liberation?

Do you have any experience with other leftist online communities?

What did those experiences teach you?

What is your approach to moderation, and how do you work with teams?

How do you deal with online drama and people who try to start things for the sake of it?

What current comms would you be interested in moderating?

Do you have any ideas for community engagement?

What is your general time availability? (Time zone, amounts, common browsing times, etc)

Element informationElement is a messaging app that lets you talk to people over the Matrix protocol.

To get started, check out this link, where you can choose to either download Element for your platform or, if on a computer, open it in a browser.

The instructions that follow are for the desktop application and the web application, but the process is similar on all apps:

Press "Create Account"

We host our own Matrix server, so if you want you can change matrix.org to chapo.chat.

This is completely optional; users who sign up with a matrix.org username can still talk to people with chapo.chat username.

(Note: It is chapo.chat, not hexbear.net. Also, registrations aren't always open on chapo.chat; if they're not, just create an account on matrix.org)

Fill in a username and password

Hit register, and you're done!

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[–] DeathToBritain@hexbear.net 15 points 13 hours ago (4 children)

so, I have an extreme anxiety disorder and would like to know something in particular. can mods see a time stamp of an upvote? because, it is possible to upvote a comment which is later edited to take a position that could be read as reactionary; it is also possible a seeming well meaning question can be hashed out in replies that make it clear such an innocuous post is in fact a brainworm of the poster and I am seemingly agreeing with the thread when I simply upvoted the earlier parts in a thread before later comments came.

honestly all of this seems so labour intensive and subjective in the sheer lack of context seemingly provided by a name in a list next to a comment, that I have to wonder the rationale at all in using upvotes as a form of moderation. just because it can be done doesn't mean you have to do it. the most consistent form of moderation will always be looking at what people actually post, and it is easy to just call it there. keep it shrimple 🦐

[–] CARCOSA@hexbear.net 2 points 5 hours ago

No timestamp and it will be used in combination with all the other info we have available not just the upvote

[–] Alaskaball@hexbear.net 13 points 12 hours ago* (last edited 12 hours ago) (1 children)

nope, here's what we see

all you get is a name that's a hyperlink to that user's account

[–] DeathToBritain@hexbear.net 18 points 11 hours ago (2 children)

thank you Alaskaball, it's as bad as I thought lmao. you can now be judged based on versions of an edited comment you upvoted and never saw the change. I appreciate the transparency you consistently provide, it helps a lot!

[–] Nakoichi@hexbear.net 12 points 11 hours ago

This is actually a really good point

[–] Alaskaball@hexbear.net 11 points 11 hours ago (1 children)

I'd personally like to be as open about these kinds of things as much as I'm reasonably allowed to. Demystify the mechanical process' that happens behind the scenes helps give all parties a more wholistic understanding of the bigger picture without any parts of it being distorted by misinformation or misunderstandings.

[–] Nakoichi@hexbear.net 3 points 8 hours ago (1 children)

TIL wholistic is a word separate from holistic.

[–] AssortedBiscuits@hexbear.net 12 points 13 hours ago

it is possible to upvote a comment which is later edited to take a position that could be read as reactionary;

Damn, that's another thing I haven't thought about. And it's one of the oldest trolling tricks in the book.

[–] Lyudmila@hexbear.net 6 points 13 hours ago (1 children)

Mods actually cannot see vote audits, just the admins. Having said that, no, we do not have timestamps or a context view to determine any additional info.

I think there are some places where vote audits could be a helpful tool for moderation, like finding spambots upvoting each other's terrible ads or identifying vote manipulation alts.

I don't think it's currently something that can do what was attempted here. I will do everything I can to ensure it isn't used this way again. Why did it happen this time? I won't lie, I was asleep when it happened. How will I ensure that it doesn't happen again? (No, I'm not stealing Elon's tweeting Amphetamines.) We're slowing down and instituting a review period for mod and admin actions. These things need to be fully discussed and analyzed before they happen, not done hastily or without a consensus.

[–] DeathToBritain@hexbear.net 9 points 11 hours ago

Lyudmila, I really appreciated the mop up you provided in the last struggle session it felt more productive than the 8 previous threads that weekend, and you do seem to always want to help listen to concerns. but, I can't say "yeah trust me, it's not gonna be as bad as it could be" fills me with confidence. a lot of users are wary of admins decisions rn I hope you appreciate, but as I said I respect a lot of the community engagement you show in these situations in particular. I hope it goes well whatever you guys hash out

[–] GnastyGnuts@hexbear.net 13 points 13 hours ago (1 children)

I'll say up front that I'm a bit confused by everything. It seems like I log out for a day or two and a bunch of wild stuff happens and I just feel lost.

It seems to me that the site has largely been fine as is, and that it doesn't really need the amount of tinkering that the mods & admins seem to think? To whatever extent the people running the site want to change its functionality or culture in some substantive way, my impression is just that the rest of the users want to be a part of those choices, rather than a feeling of "us / them", where it feels like the people with admin & mod credentials operate like a wholly separate entity.

I notice a lot of people commenting on upvote-policing and stuff of that nature, and I'll say that more than half the time I use this website I am literally high and will sometimes just zone-out and upvote everything I see without reading it. If I notice the comment is shitty, or that it's some of our users getting needlessly aggressive with each other, I will remove my upvotes, but that's only if I actually notice.

I wish you all the best and hope this site stays cool and good. It is my favorite place online.

[–] engelsaxons@hexbear.net 1 points 6 hours ago

We need to practice democratic centralism, with a Hexbear Vanguard Party and membership made up of those in good standing and possibly established credibility hexbear-chapochat

[–] DeathToBritain@hexbear.net 15 points 13 hours ago (1 children)

don't tell anybody, but sometimes I upvote comments that end in 9 because I want them to be nice multiples of 10. I await my flogging for promotion and platforming of reactionary content

[–] peeonyou@hexbear.net 5 points 10 hours ago

i just did the same to your comment

[–] dustbunnies@hexbear.net 30 points 16 hours ago (7 children)

slowly starting to process everything that has been said across the threads about this and I have questions. I would prefer to wait to process things more before posting, but I'm worried the thread will get locked before I'm ready.

(if you have DM'd me, I will reply eventually ❀️)

I have concerns and questions about the way mistakes are handled here that will echo things said during the Great -Tank Comms Struggle Session of two weeks ago. this is not an attempt to reignite it; the possibility of doing it is terrifying, but I feel compelled to try to get at the heart of the problem expressed by many neurodivergent comrades therein, and I have fresh personal experience with the importance of this problem.

we make social mistakes because social difficulties are part of our disability. punishing people for crossing hidden and ill-defined red lines is ableist, especially when there's been no other reason to doubt that person's good faith.


Questions & Concerns:

  • can someone help me read this quote

For active hexbear users, we do encourage a mod sending a warning message, however that is not required. We frequently give 1 day temp bans without such a warning and while we do wish we had more mod tools available, we work with what we've got.

from @CARCOSA's comment here in a way that isn't contradictory with @Lyudmila's statement that you would not be banning users for a single upvote anymore?

this indicates to me that the exact same thing could happen again if I'm not exceedingly careful with my upvotes, which absolutely I will try to be, but I just know myself well enough to know that I'm going to fuck up again eventually. 🀷 if perfection is the standard to not have my RSD triggered to that degree, this is not a safe place for me.

  • did none of the other upvotes I made in that thread matter or make anyone question whether I actually agreed with that comment?

I looked back at the thread this morning, and I see that I had also upvoted queermunist's reply to the objectionable comment (most of the other replies to it were made after leaving the thread to read other things and then go touch grass, sometime after which I was banned)

other comments in the thread that I upvoted:
https://hexbear.net/comment/5659695 (and several replies)
https://hexbear.net/comment/5659596
https://hexbear.net/comment/5659550

idk if there's a way to check the timestamp of when I voted on these things to prove that it was during that same initial viewing of the thread, but I hope so, especially when you're using a "pattern of activity" for bans.

afaik, I don't have a track record of consistently problematic upvotes, but I know my AuDHD self well enough to know that I've probably similarly marked a thing planning to come back to it and then totally forgotten, or just been autistic or uneducated enough to not understand the subtext that a better-informed mod is getting, or just not noticed that my thumb hit the button when I browse with my phone on night-mode, which is grayscale and makes it impossible to tell if I voted unless I see the little bear spin.

  • is it not policy to look at contravening comments in the thread and see how many of the problematic upvoters voted on them, too? would that not indicate something other than support for reactionary views and merit deeper consideration?

the description of the "vote audit" process makes it sound like a fair bit of work, only a single comment at a time that was specifically requested (a process which includes both mods and users??), and names that stick get punished, except sometimes it's a first offense and that's okay but also it's not.

getting context sounds onerous, but it seems unfair and misguided to ban people for poor upvotes without taking them into context with their other upvotes. how do you establish a "pattern of upvote activity" without context? being highly selective in your choice of data points does not demonstrate a pattern. and apparently you don't actually need a pattern of activity for a one-day ban anyway because those shouldn't matter that much to anyone.

kitty-cri

  • is there a threshold number of upvotes on a terrible comment that triggers a vote audit? it seems like lots of things get removed without triggering an audit and collective punishment. is it based more on the awfulness of the content? is it entirely up to the mod removing the comment or are there rules for when something must be audited? how do users request an audit and action against the upvoters?

  • it seems like even if a single upvote wouldn't merit a ban anymore (except it might!), going for a ban based on a "pattern of upvotes" when their upvote action is removed from the context of their other upvotes and actions and when someone has given you no other reason to think they're secretly a reactionary bigot is still misguided and cruel. especially when there were so many of your neurodivergent comrades telling you in the Great -Tank Comms Struggle Session of two weeks ago that we would welcome being called out on things so we can learn, because difficulties with social cues is an inherent part of our disabilities, and we want to both Be Better but also just not accidentally hurt anyone.

we're constantly getting accidentally hurt ourselves, we know what it's like when nobody gives a shit about your feelings, we are your allies or we wouldn't be here.

Hexbear: you want to be a safe and welcoming place for leftists, especially leftists from marginalized communities, but you are so quick to reject even the perception of bigotry that you are inherently unsafe to many comrades attracted by that expressed ethos.

I would like to believe that a single poor upvote will no longer be enough reason to ban someone, but that's super unclear, and also I guess I'm confused why it ever has been, or why there isn't further investigation of activity around questionable votes if mods are presuming intentions from them.

  • is the power to ban vested in each mod individually, or does it require consultation? I think I had assumed the latter but am coming to understand that it might be the former, which feels like a giant lightbulb moment for my understanding of site dynamics and interpersonal issues.

  • what is the policy on modlog deletions? how can your neurodivergent comrades hope to understand the rules when their application is often hidden and unequal?

and then my most important question:

  • what is the Code of Conduct for the mod team?

there are people on the mod team with usernames that often appear above "deleted by mod", often for "hostility" – could you please help me understand how upvote activity is more impactful for creating a hostile environment than open hostility from mods? (are the people who upvoted those comments punished?)

it doesn't seem unreasonable for there to be higher standards for mod behavior, but it seems like they're actually lower. I completely understand wanting to give your friends/coworkers extra grace, but also, certainly you must understand how this fosters an in-group/out-group dynamic that contributes to a hostile environment.

I hope we can discuss these questions with assumption of good intentions from the people we disagree with and that the thread will stay unlocked long enough to discuss them.

it takes autistic people longer to process things. I know that is not convenient. 🀷

[–] engelsaxons@hexbear.net 7 points 6 hours ago

Because you've received so many Orders of Lenin (order-of-lenin ) already, I'm giving you a Hero of Socialist Labor instead, especially since such a well-crafted post seems to make it particularly appropriate Care-Comrade

hero-of-socialist-labor

[–] Red_Eclipse@hexbear.net 15 points 14 hours ago

Thanks for saying what I wanted to say. I was too afraid to post lol.

[–] Frank@hexbear.net 16 points 14 hours ago
[–] DeathToBritain@hexbear.net 12 points 14 hours ago

very good post! thank you!

[–] SocialistDovahkiin@hexbear.net 9 points 15 hours ago* (last edited 15 hours ago) (1 children)

This post is pretty intense but I'm trying to be validating, I'm sorry if I screw up :( if I do tell me how so I can remove/fix it

thank you for effort posting. Your effort post during the dunking struggle session actually made me back off entirely because I was realizing I was hurting people for the exact reason I cared about or disliked dunking stuff in the first place. I just really dislike how often dunking turns into a social mechanism to enforce specific invisible lines, which is obviously something I never really communicated well because, well, I was in a terrible mindset and had a bad perspective on it.

I think these arguments are part of a more holistic issue that has existed since the beginning of the site and has seen neurodivergent moderators and users that can't cope with it or properly develop masking techniques to deal with it to quit in droves, which has caused it to get worse because all of the people who would have made it better were basically forced to leave.

A lot of very cool and very gay and autistic people disappeared because of this. And I think it's gotten worse because, while we are of course still a very queer and neurodivergent site, we've managed to reinforce these patterns that hurt neurodivergent people regardless. It's a system that's become disconnected from any specific users or leadership, because it's become a dominant ideology of the site.

Both the changes I wanted to see to "dunk culture" and the whole upvotes thing comes from this same issue. We as a site are so fundamentally infected with this attitude that is inherently hostile to many, many neurodivergent people, that changes I believe moderators have made to try and fix it have been done with the exact problematic attitude. The misgendering and toxicity moderators showed to users was this exact thing made manifest. We are so fundamentally disconnected from the struggle against ableism on a systemic level on this site that our leadership cannot justify changes made with actual neurodivergent theory. Instead, random vibes-based accusations of users that outright misgender and make false assumptions of them had to be conjured up, because users and moderators could tell something was wrong but they basically developed an entirely false consciousness due to having no proper way to describe it (or, worse, a concern that the website's user base wouldn't take ableism seriously).

But this site is important to people, and especially neurodivergent users. And upvotes are toxic, and I think the need to monitor them and randomly punish people who cross invisible boundaries with them is proof of that. And lots of our focus on ability and competency and aesthetic judgements over moral ones is fundamentally ableist. But we can't directly confront it because it goes directly against a core conceit and misconception that I believe is at the core of the "dirtbag left": that "civility" and avoiding random unrelated insults are the same thing.

But they're not. Being uncivil is absolutely possible to do while being precise and specific with what you hate. Being uncivil practically requires it, actually, because it's greatest virtue is in being truthful and when someone is calling people ugly or pathetic or stupid they're being imprecise and inherently less truthful because doing that is circling around what they have actual issues with.

We've let ourselves internalize this aspect of "civility" as a rule- That it is inherently more acceptable to judge and insult and harass and malign evil because it is pathetic, disabled, or weak, than because it is evil. Calling a Nazi a piece of shit Nazi isn't enough- they have to be a cuck and a simp and stupid and ugly and have a weird chin, because we've internalized this fundamentally ableist and deeply problematic idea that it's more acceptable and accurate to judge people for traits that are in no way their fault by using these demeaning words for normal variation, in fact variation that is very often influenced by mental processes and physical disabilities, than it is to just say someone is bad because they are willfully hurting people. It's liberal and weak and silly to view someone as a problem because they are a capitalist tyrant, apparently, despite that making no fucking sense. We feel like we have to justify it with random jabs at personality traits and body types and patterns of behavior that we subconsciously view as lesser because of the huge variety of bigoted systems we've all internalized. And we've taken all of this and claimed it's better because it's less civil, when really all we're doing is taking the same fucking civility fetish and painting it over with a dirtbag left color scheme.

This is so, so fucked. TC69 obviously fucked up bad and I think this is why. We need some sort of immense purge of the entire site's toxic brainworms, it's staff, its user base. I don't really think this involves mass banning though? More like mass re-education. We need mass mod mails and messages and interventions and empathetic approaches to rule breaking and a completely different approach to policing the site than we have done ever before.

Toxicity done in the name of progressivism is still anti-progressive and toxic. Being aggressive and hating someone for good reasons isn't toxic. But we've mixed those two things up and now we have people justifying their harm done to marginalized comrades with anti-civility rhetoric and civility fetishists justifying their protection of that harm with progressive rhetoric.

This is not a good direction for the site and it's been going this direction since its inception. It has been consistently hostile and difficult to use for neurodivergent users. It has been having this exact issue in different ways since the beginning and that's because it never, ever implements this actual fundamental change in perspective, only ever band aid changes in conversational policy or random auxiliary rules.

There needs to be a fundamental change in site philosophy. I have seen neurodivergent users be harmed by this site far too many times now for it to be a random or coincidental thing, it is a fundamental issue that has been unresolved for its entire existence.

Edit: To be clear, I expect immense pushback to this. I'm certain many will agree in principle now, but the opinions will shift quickly when they realize they have to give up specific phrases or wording or insults or specific habits and forms of bullying. I expect all sorts of attempts to paint an actual radical movement designed to make the site more neurodivergent-friendly as "problematic", "liberal". Of "removing the site's dirtbag roots and proper teeth". But this is a false perception of the site's current existence. It does not threaten anything. Any ideology that relies on co-opting and using the criticisms and beliefs dominant ideology itself uses to enforce it's power cannot be revolutionary, not without changing what those very criticisms and beliefs are, which is... not happening. To make Hexbear an explicitly, radically pro-autistic-behavior and interaction website will make it more radical, not less. That's because it will mean focusing on our actual radical criticisms and how to make those criticisms relevant to and relatable to your average person, rather than figuring out how to warp reactionary insults into somehow progressive statements because it's "just common sense". Common sense is fake, it's reactionary, and it is often terrible and bad

And I've seen these radical criticisms. They're there and they're like the majority of the site. But they're just covered in this unrefined, liberalistic, reactionary ableism that prevents it from being what it could be. It's like a piece of steel that hasn't had the extra rocks and slag cleaned off and it's just built up more and more gunk over time despite the immensely strong and immovably dependable foundation.

SYSTEMS ARE NOT USERS FAULTS, FIX THE FUCKJNG SYSTEMS AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA shoulder-grab USE A BETTER SOFTWARE MAKE EGERYTHINGN MORE NEURODIVERGENT FRIENDLY POLL QCCWSSIBLE COLOR ACHEMES MAKE A NEURODIVERGENT ADMIN CAUCUS HAVE A GOOD FAITH ASSUMING MODERATION STRATEGY IMPLEMENT DISABIKITY IMPROVEMENTS lets-fucking-go

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[–] Frank@hexbear.net 16 points 16 hours ago (1 children)

In this post

https://hexbear.net/comment/5665490

I made several statements that the mods had acted in violation of the Code of Conduct and quoted several lines from the Code of Conduct.

I have discovered that I was quoting an older version of the CoC and so my statements were incorrect. I would like to issue this correction and apologize. The quoted lines are not from the current version of the Code of Conduct and should be disregarded.

[–] Lyudmila@hexbear.net 5 points 13 hours ago (1 children)

I would recommend editing the previous post to reflect the changes. Everyone makes mistakes, the important things are that we're able to correct them, and be as forgiving of other people's mistakes as we are of our own. heart-sickle

[–] Frank@hexbear.net 4 points 6 hours ago

The thread is locked and to the best of my knowledge the comment cannot be edited.

[–] MaoTheLawn@hexbear.net 25 points 19 hours ago (8 children)

Why don't you make any of this shit democratic?

Just do a poll. Let the people decide.

[–] FunkyStuff@hexbear.net 10 points 16 hours ago

I don't think polling the whole community makes sense. As Carcosa stated, the purpose of these changes has been to provide a better environment for communities that are very underrepresented in the site's demographics, and to counter chauvinism/ignorance. You can't expect to get anti-chauvinist and informed perspectives when polling the broad community. At least not if you just do whatever the majority of users say.

That said, it would probably be a good thing if admin measures were dicussed with the community who's supposed to benefit from them first, then the community as a whole, to discuss potential downsides or issues with the new actions. E.g. taking upvotes into account for moderation is a good idea for protecting marginalized users who feel that chauvinists on Hexbear roam free by just never explicitly stating their views, but it comes with a heavy downside that large sectors of the userbase now won't feel comfortable upvoting anything. This should've been discussed with the whole community before being implemented.

IMO as much as this was a misstep and we need a clear, central communication of intent before each of these actions (not the disorganized mess we've seen for the last 2 struggle sessions), the admin team had previously done a good job of taking the community's input into account while still allowing the voices of vulnerable communities to weigh in appropriately. I just wish that they'd apply the same methodology they've used for defederation actions for these moderation changes.

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[–] CredibleBattery@hexbear.net 24 points 19 hours ago* (last edited 19 hours ago)

downbear i am upvoting everything in this thread at my own risk

[–] Tervell@hexbear.net 56 points 23 hours ago (5 children)
  1. Am I missing something obvious, or is the new upvote policy and the motivation for it not in any way explained in this post, or in the proposals post, or anywhere visible? I had to trawl through a bunch of posts to even find out what's going on, from what I could see, the policy is explained and introduced in this comment, in a now locked thread, in a comm we've only had for like 3 weeks, that has a grand total, of, uh, 64 subscribers? Is this what we mean by transparency?

    Like, imagine if someone was, I dunno, hiking in the mountains for the past month, and they suddenly come back to some new moderation policies that will be entirely incomprehensible if you haven't gone through 10000 comments worth of site lore. I mean, I actually did fucking follow the tanks drama, but I guess I miss like one fucking thread and now I might as well be completely out of the loop.

    For a site where we often tell people to touch grass, we sure as hell seem to expect everyone to be terminally online enough to keep up with our incessant stupidity if they want to have any chance of understanding why any action is being taken.

    β €

  2. I'm also throwing my hat into the ring as a habitual upvoter. Like, I don't quite use upvotes as a "read" button, but I definitely don't think too much about it. I upvote pretty much anyone who responds to one of my posts, unless they say something particularly disagreeable, I dunno, it just feels like... a courtesy somehow? Sometimes people will make some joke or obscure reference that goes completely over my head, and I'll just sit there and ponder it for a minute... and upvote it anyway shrug-outta-hecks

    I dunno, it sounds stupid, but am I expected to treat every button press through a purely rational and analytical lens here? I'm not the site's fucking UX designer, I'm just a monkey who clicks on things.

    I do use it as a "read" button in exorbitantly long threads (which, you know, we do get a fucking lot of), sometimes I'll see that a response descends into deep-nesting, upvote it, scroll down to read some other, shorter subthreads, and then come back to finish reading the first one. Now, sometimes I'll get tired and give up on reading the rest of the thread, and thus obviously not upvote the remaining comments in it, but this isn't any sort of indication that I agreed with the first few responses and disagreed with the remaining ones, it's just an indication of where I lost interest and gave up niko-yawn.

    I will also often upvote both sides of an argument too (as long as, again, one side isn't being particularly disagreeable or impolite, and it should obviously be noted here that the line between "I mildly disagree with this but will still upvote it" and "I definitely won't upvote this" is inherently vague, arbitrary, and vibes-based, I'm not a Sentiment Analysis algorithm, I'm a human being, with moods, and headaches, and various petty attitudes that I may or may not even be consciously aware of). There isn't much rhyme or reason to this, the idea of "upvote = agreement/support" is just entirely disconnected from users' behavior here.

    β €

  3. I pretty much stay out of struggle session discourse (aside from, occasionally, uh... lurking the threads and silently upvoting the side I agree with keikaku, but I guess I'll have to stop doing that lest I end up backing the losing side in one of those pika-pickaxe ), this is maybe the first time I'm posting something serious in one, but this is genuinely starting to wear on me, it's been what, 3 weeks of near-permanent ~~revolution~~ struggle? Every time I see a new pinned thread a sense of dread comes over me, how long is this going to fucking go on for? Can we just like, put a fucking moratorium on policy changes until things calm down a bit?

    β €

  4. I'll link a couple of @Frank@hexbear.net's comments from the past thread, since he's way more eloquent on this than I'll ever be, and I'm not sure how many people have even seen that thread (refer to pt. 1): on the inversion of mod/user roles and on discipline requiring trust.

    The last one in particular I will reiterate - discipline requires trust. At this stage, I am not sure if I can reasonably trust the moderation team: the mod statements from the previous drama, the embarrassing "self-crit" of one of those mods that followed, the fact that you made someone an admin with the reasoning of "well, they used to be an admin before!", said person proceeded to completely mismanage the situation, start randomly handing out bans as some form of humor (?!), and just casually nope out of the mess they created and delete their entire presence here (I don't care how many times you say "we disagree with her decisions", the fact that this was allowed to happen in the first place is such a severe lapse in judgement that I don't even know what to fucking say), the attempt at some kind of Tom Clancy scheme of manipulating other lemmy instances for some reason... given all of this, just this general caliber of decision-making competence on display here, how am I supposed to trust the moderation team to actually pore over individual users posts and upvotes and engage in some kind of internet psychoanalysis in order to discipline them fairly?

    I understand and sympathize that lemmy's moderation tools are lacking, but that's not the fault of the users. In fact, the general attitude of a lot of the userbase seems to be broadly critical of this site being a reddit offshoot! Although this is of course difficult to objectively judge (some of this is just ironic grillman "phpBB forums... they don't make 'em like they used to *sip*" posting, and many users don't actively comment so their attitude is unknown), the broad popularity of the megathreads does seem to indicate the posters yearn for a different kind of site structure than the one we have. Now, at this stage it's of course not really an option to just throw the site away and begin anew as something else, but still, being stuck with a shitty website that lacks functionality isn't something the users should be punished over!

what was the point of the last few weeks?

[–] darkmode@hexbear.net 19 points 18 hours ago (1 children)

No, you're not missing something. There's been barely any (opinion: what I would deem) acceptable context provided for these changes and when pressed we were told "go check the modlog lol". One can check the modlog and expect that there's some kind of upsurge in bannable bigotry but to my eye its business as usual. The mods want this site to be something it isn't and are trying to force that on a small, shrinking userbase that doesn't agree.

[–] AssortedBiscuits@hexbear.net 16 points 16 hours ago

The modlog is completely anonymous and vague as hell lol

[–] CARCOSA@hexbear.net 7 points 14 hours ago

I agree with a lot of what you said, and this post is about how we are changing to try and regain some of the trust.

We have always used upvote auditing to help inform moderator decision, this post is about stating that the previous 1 day ban wave for upvoting a single comment will not happen again. We are not constantly monitoring upvotes or logging who votes on what.

Over the course of the past year, there have been maybe 10 posts/comments that we did an upvote audit on, usually when we suspect vote manipulation or a reactionary post/comment requested by a community mod. In the event a user shows up on 3 out of 10 upvote audits, that causes us to look closer. It is used in conjunction with mod-log and post/comment history to decide what site-wide mod action to take.

A mark comment as read option is in development, but until then we will not be banning any active hexbear users based on upvote patterns alone.

We will be putting an extended freeze on all changes for the near future and will not be adding admins for the foreseeable future.

You are 100% correct the past few weeks have been unduly stressful in large part due to how these changes were communicated and decided. Opening up the site decision proposals to the community at all stages and striving to learn from the mistakes of the past month is what we are doing to try and rebuild that trust.

The point was to take specific actions asked by marginalized members of the community to help hexbear feel safer, while I stand by the intent behind the actions I do acknowledge failure in executing and community communication.

Thank you for your comment, and if you have anything more to add, please do so.

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[–] Chronicon@hexbear.net 11 points 17 hours ago (2 children)

I cant believe people are still so mad. I don't 100% agree with all mod/admin decisions but like, its fine, its just a temp ban from an anonymous shitposting site, you can make a new account, everyone needs to take a chill pill, mods included

[–] Frank@hexbear.net 27 points 17 hours ago (1 children)

This action caused serious distress to several users and has badly damaged trust. It may not seem important to you, but it is important to others. Please be compassionate for people who may have very different circumstances from you.

[–] Wisp@hexbear.net 17 points 16 hours ago

This is where I’m at. I do not care about this or most of the struggle sessions on this site on a personal level. But it’s very clear that many people do. And seeing their concerns get brushed off and being told it’s not that serious touch grass is kinda shittty

[–] Aradina@lemmy.ml 17 points 16 hours ago (3 children)

Have some empathy, come on

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