Ask Lemmy
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I have never liked 4chan because I consider the lack of moderation to be a very very bad thing, but honestly I have never used it nor have I been attracted to it, on the other hand, I used Reddit for many years and I consider it to be ok (leaving aside the API abuse and training AI with your users posts), but I'm on Lemmy because I like the open source philosophy and I tend to use exclusively open source software, and since Lemmy is an open source project I really enjoy being here. I always wanted to use Mastodon but as I said, I don't like Twitter, so Lemmy is my paradise.
What do you think about moderation on reddit?
I find it difficult to give an opinion on this, on the one hand I consider that it should not be easy to be a moderator but on the other hand I remember cases of certain communities (r/JusticeServed) where the moderators were corrupt and accepted money in exchange for banning someone from the sub, or tried to hide certain posts that did not suit them, and that seems to me to be complete bullshit but not all subreddit's mods are like that and you can not judge like that.
I guess Lemmy's advantage in this case, is that because of the nature of the fediverse it is more difficult for that to happen, but it can happen.
It is something I need to figure out on my own but what is moderation like here? Similar to reddit? Are mods paid or volunteers?
I think on Reddit most mods were volunteers, those who were paid were the admins.
And so far I haven't encountered any problems with moderators personally although not long ago there was a problem with a community (c/shitposting) where some unscrupulous users started to upload child pornography (CP) (another term is used but I don't remember) in the comments as images and that sucked because Lemmy unlike Reddit has no automatic post deletion tool (like bots) or enough moderation tools (as I have read from some moderators) and you must consider that the instances are maintained by people like you and me without any legal backing, if I have an instance where I federated with you and someone uploads CP to your instance, that CP will be in my own instance and that can have serious legal consequences for everyone. and besides, since moderators are volunteers they can't spend all day checking every post and comment because they have a real life out there.
Sorry, not exactly following you. So are Lemmy mods volunteers too?
Yes.
Any cases of "power tripping" by the mods? I feel reddit mods in general fail to be impartial. What is Lemmy's approach to prevent that?
Hi there! Looks like you linked to a Lemmy community using a URL instead of its name, which doesn't work well for people on different instances. Try fixing it like this: [email protected]