• Iceblade@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    Expectations of what is part of the discussion, not expectations of privacy.

    As for doxxing, that’s a problem with all social media - but possibly worse on the “regular” ones (people having mobs attacking their houses, being arrested in countries with censorship laws etc.)

      • Iceblade@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        I agree that it would be better if people used votes as a marker of quality, but strongly disagree on moderation action based on voting.

        Personally, there’s three scenarios when I use downvotes w/o commenting:

        • Someone has already voiced the reason

        • I don’t have time/energy to comment

        • The target is a censored echo-chamber that will ban anyone who disagrees (can’t vote/show disapproval if you’re banned) - example would be .ml communities having moments about how stalinist USSR did nothing wrong.

        Anyway, once a post from a community rises sufficiently to pop up on all, it becomes a part of the larger discussion, and voting will shift towards the opinions of the larger fediverse. This is also usually when communities get discovered by more people. If a community doesn’t want the engagement of the wider user-base, a closed blog may be more suitable as a forum, or alternatively have an instance w/o downvoting.

        When browsing all or new I do so both to break out of my bubble and to vote on content (usually stuff I find interesting).