We’re looking to put together some more detailed rules on what should and should not be submitted to the instance. Things such as, but not exclusively:

  • What types of message you would always like to see removed on sight
  • Whether there are any types of message which should be left up (borderline, with strong corrections from the community)
  • Where the line is drawn on political views (and how gray areas should be treated)

I’ll make no bones: Moderating uk/ukpol has been a learning experience for me.
I’ve learned that there often isn’t much difference between “leaving a comment up because the community has done an excellent job highlighting flaws” and “I should have removed this hours ago, the community shouldn’t have to do this”.
As there isn’t a way to mod-tag a post, inaction on negative posts can reflect badly on the instance as a whole.

Having some clear guidelines/rules will hopefully simplify things.
And more admins should mean that if a report isn’t looked at, someone can review it as an escalation.

I’ve also enabled the slur filters. And we’ll be listening to see if anything needs adding/removing (the template had swearing blocked :| )

So…Answers on a postcard, I guess!

  • BluesF
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    1 year ago

    Outside of what is genuinely illegal I think it is better that speech considered to be objectionable by the community remains visible so that our collective attitude towards those things are also visible. What I mean is I would rather see bigots hounded and debated than just banned… I don’t think defaulting to the ban hammer is the way outside of specific safe spaces.

    • GreatAlbatrossOPMA
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      1 year ago

      I appreciate the input. I’ll be honest, bigots getting hounded is my preference too.
      But a couple of times, I’ve been hounded for not deleting the bigot posts. That’s one of the reasons I was keen to get feedback, to find out what people would prefer.
      As if most of the feddit.uk members are keen for that, it’ll become policy.

      • BluesF
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        1 year ago

        I wish I could say I was surprised… I think there’s a need for online spaces where bigotry is just absolutely not tolerated, but I’m not sure every space should become one.

    • bugsmith@programming.dev
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      11 months ago

      Absolutely second this.
      Let’s not throw blanket bans out and create an echo chamber whilst stifling discussion.
      Those who break the spirit of the rules will be called out, downvoted, and argued with. This isn’t a bad thing. Serial offenders will be apparent and can be dealt with on a case-by-case basis, with warnings and bans.

      I say this as an admin of another large instance, having to deal this this myself.