Carrolade

joined 7 months ago
[–] [email protected] 1 points 11 hours ago

Yeah I've been growing a little frustrated as well, as my tone in that earlier comment probably indicated. But a troll isn't the only stubborn person around here, and I actually care about this community and the broader Fediverse project.

I agree, they don't seem particularly concerned, which is why I've steadily pivoted more towards general conversations on what trolling actually is, what the classic trollface.jpg really represents, and methods by which it seeks to accomplish its goals. If this or any other community I'm active in is going to allow these behaviors, it won't be able to claim ignorance of how it all works.

It's admittedly a big topic though.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 11 hours ago

Personally I am very willing to pay full price and even occasionally buy pointless extras I don't care about if it helps reward their passion for a project I see as a valuable contribution. I'll even pre-order or provide them some free advertising in some cases. Especially if its the sort of dev where it seems like their long-term survival might be in question.

I feel like you can usually tell when the dev needs money or doesn't.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 11 hours ago (2 children)

That's part of the problem too. They don't understand what a dedicated troll's real long-term goals are. Good on them for never having been one, but I'd rather have a rare example of a healthy large internet community than a trolly one.

[–] [email protected] 32 points 11 hours ago (2 children)

The Constitution is a very short document, you can read the whole thing in about 10 minutes or so. It does not include very much in the way of details, generally speaking.

Reading it when you're young is one thing, you don't really understand how systems come together anyway at that age. Rereading it as an adult is a bit of an eye-opener though, as it's easy to see just how little it really establishes, and what sorts of directions abuses could potentially come from.

https://www.archives.gov/founding-docs/constitution-transcript

[–] [email protected] 0 points 11 hours ago (4 children)

I think they're just erring on the side of free speech in general. They've always been fairly lenient with comment behavior that isn't extremely blatant. Since they don't seem to understand the nature of these things, we sort of have a responsibility to educate about it.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 23 hours ago* (last edited 23 hours ago) (6 children)

So what about the trolling behavior in comments?

People do not complain about his posts, let me repeat that, his posts are not the problem. Nobody cares about his opinions. Nobody minds that he likes third parties, that part is fine.

It's the behavior in comment sections that is the problem. How is it that we have a rule 4 that prohibits trolling, but we allow a user who consistently exhibits comment behavior intended to simply irritate whoever is interacting with them? Low effort, consistently full of logical fallacies, frequently misrepresenting himself and others, etc. These indicate a troll.

Again, it is comment behavior that is the problem. How many of his comments need to be removed before it is identified as a problematic account? I think we deserve some transparency here.

Where and how do you draw the line with regards to trolling behaviors in comments sections?

edit: Let me quote him from just below here, where he replied to someone replying to you right here:

I don’t have to explain anything to you or anyone else. Feel free to stop responding and commenting on my posts if you don’t want to hear replies from me. Thanks! :)

Does this add anything to a conversation? Does this further discourse in any constructive way? Does this encourage people to positively participate in our community?

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 day ago

Main benefit of a megathread is it helps prevent engagement from being splintered. So instead of having a dozen separate threads about an issue, with each one only having a few people participating, the issue could have one single megathread where everyone can go and all the interaction can get concentrated in a single location. This improves the experience for everyone discussing the topic, and also improves the experience of everyone who is uninterested in the topic since they won't be seeing large numbers of threads about it.

I think topics that are fairly specific, with a short chronological window and would include a lot of people wanting to talk about them make good megathreads. Major sporting events, major singular political events, big product releases, revolutionary scientific breakthroughs, long-awaited press releases or disclosures, major court cases, big concerts/public gatherings, etc.

There is a line where you don't want things to be too big, though, otherwise they become a slog to wade through. In these cases it can be broken into several megathreads, or you can even just make a community for the topic. Like, the Olympics would be a good example of too big for a single megathread.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 1 day ago

I'm not sure we can call Peronism fascist. While it was populist and nationalistic, it's missing that hallmark blood-and-soil (this land for our bloodline) aspect that really marks out fascist ideologies.

You can't really call yourself fascist if you're trying to say all your people are equal, you need to be trying to establish some sort of hierarchical order where these citizens are always better than those citizens.

[–] [email protected] 19 points 1 day ago

They're fairly small polls conducted of people who specifically watched the debate. Definitely not representative of the overall electorate.

[–] [email protected] 17 points 1 day ago

tbf, them taking responsibility for other people's accomplishments has gotten fairly common in recent years. They need to be able to show something to their voters asides tax cuts for the rich, half-built walls and bans of Muslims entering the country that get struck down in court. So why not steal credit for other people's successes?

Btw, did you all know that I'm actually the lead dev of Mastadon? Yep, it was just some barely-running service before I came along, and I got it fixed right up. Look at how good my project is doing! I'm just the greatest, aren't I?

[–] [email protected] 1 points 2 days ago

"...I don’t see any way that he could match her level of intensity and humor,” said a Walz ally who was granted anonymity to speak freely about the governor.

So don't try. Go for down-to-earth, earnest, hard-working, straight-talking and honest.

Glad to hear he's working with Pete, I think that's probably the perfect combo of midwestern sensibilities and savvy to disarm Vance's Yale-trained style.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 2 days ago (6 children)

The fact that Israel is committing genocide is, in and of itself, is a casus belli. This is the exact same thing the Allies get praised for in WWII.

No, unfortunately not really. The extent of the Holocaust was not uncovered until the Allies moved into Germany and took the concentration camps. Britain was at war due to their guarantee of Polish sovereignty, the US was at war due to Pearl Harbor, and Germany declaring war on them a few days later. Nobody went into WW2 to stop a genocide. China and the USSR were at war due to being invaded.

While some credit is given to stopping the Holocaust, certainly, that was largely a side effect of simply winning WW2.

view more: next ›