this post was submitted on 28 Jul 2023
140 points (99.3% liked)
Technology
37727 readers
669 users here now
A nice place to discuss rumors, happenings, innovations, and challenges in the technology sphere. We also welcome discussions on the intersections of technology and society. If it’s technological news or discussion of technology, it probably belongs here.
Remember the overriding ethos on Beehaw: Be(e) Nice. Each user you encounter here is a person, and should be treated with kindness (even if they’re wrong, or use a Linux distro you don’t like). Personal attacks will not be tolerated.
Subcommunities on Beehaw:
This community's icon was made by Aaron Schneider, under the CC-BY-NC-SA 4.0 license.
founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
the issue here is not that i'm telling them to not do things--i don't care what they do or don't do. what i'm pointing out here is that people probably find this really stupid because it has an identical structure to and is similarly frivolous looking to a 16-year-old making a 10 page callout post against an artist for drawing problematic height gap
Sure. But, reading the comments under the .art admins posts on .art, .art people don't find it petty, nor stupid. You'd see that they are thankful. And they are the only people who are affected by the defederarion.
I'm sorry to say, but it really does not matter what other people think. It's like me, who has never been at your house, and never planning to be, thinking that your house rules are weird, arbitrary and petty. I'm also weirded out that you didn't let that or this person in your house.
Would you care about my opinion?
in a federated system necessarily yes it kind of does regardless of if you think that's fair. we get shit for what we believe (and maintain) are extremely valid and straightforward reasons for defederating with a handful of not-malicious instances and that can impact who comes here and why. if you were to create an image of being--for lack of better wording--a messy bitch with a catty and overdramatic attitude (as many people seem to read this as being) your instance will gain that reputation, it will influence who your users are, and it can go so far as to be negatively reflected onto completely innocent users.
now, if the mastodon.art person doesn't care about that then they don't care, and i'm again not saying that i care either way--it's their website, they can do what they want--but the presumption that this is in a vacuum or absent consequences is silly. it's not!
literally the opinion of a handful of people. If that was true, the instance would collapse.
There will always be people unhappy with something. You can't please everyone. The .art admin chose to please people of their instance, instead of maintaining a "look" that is expected from randos on the internet.
I'm 100% with the admin, and I'm glad the admin isn't peer-pressured into being whatever people need them to be. Again, there's a reason why the instance is so popular.
I remember artist tumblr in the 00's. Participated, then moved over to twitter in the 10's before I got sick of it. This looks like another continuation of that same community.
They can do what they like, but this reeks of the exact same kind of drama and mobs that, for example, drives fanartists to attempting suicide because they painted a character's skin a shade too light. (Zamii070, if you're curious.)
These sorts of communities form an echo chamber that, frankly, can be absolutely horrible for kids. Yeah, they can do what they want in their house, but I'm staying far the fuck away.
I know you didn't mean anything bad by it, but the person you mentioned in that fanartist example doesn't like being associated with that as she doesn't want it to be her legacy.
What the hell is this comparison. Yeah, moderation = death, people. That's why I'm on twitter, sorry, ex-twitter, where they respect muh free speech, that has never hurt anyone! /s
Sorry, rereading it and I think I was unclear. I'm saying that this community moved from tumblr, to twitter, and now to mastodon. I quit this community at the twitter stage when it became too detrimental to my mental health.
But this community uses moderation as one tool to enforce cliques, rather than to actually prevent abuse. Or, you could say, this community has a history of using moderation as a form of abuse.
Alongside that, this community has a history of inciting witch hunts over the most petty things. And they will be happy about what the moderators are doing within their own clique.