• maegul (he/they)
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    25 days ago

    I think the best way to think about this is in terms of “affordances” of the platform and the balance of their merits. “Affordances” just mean the actions and behaviours enabled by the platform’s features (a jargon-y but useful word I’ve seen others use in these discussions).

    Broader principles like privacy are important too, but I think can easily lead to less productive and relevant discussions, in part because many of the counters or complications will come down to the actual affordances.

    The biggest affordance is obvious: more polarisation & abusive/antagonistic behaviour

    From what I’ve read so far, I think everyone shares a pretty clear understanding of what public votes will lead to … a more heated and polarising dynamic, with potential abuse vectors opening up, and less honesty and openness in voting. And I think most share a distaste for that scenario. Either way, I do, and I’d encourage others to think about how it’s likely result of public votes and with the internet being the internet, is unlikely to be pleasant or fruitful.

    Specific people having access doesn’t decide the matter

    While others have access to vote data, namely admins of instances, mods (for their communities) and members of platforms that make votes public like k/mbin, I don’t think this is decisive.

    It’s about the behaviours that are being enabled and the balance of behaviours and how they interact to form community dynamics, with the fediverse itself being an important factor. An admin or mod having access to votes is part of making their job easier, which is a good thing. It’s power and responsibility. And the moment they violate the bounds of their role by “doxing” someone’s voting data, that’d obviously be a bad thing, but with countermeasures we can take. We can leave their instance or community and our instance can defederate from them … their account can be blocked and possibly banned by admins. On balance, this seems stable and fair enough to me.

    In the case of other platforms, like k/mbin, that’s definitely more tricky. But again, defederation is always a possibility here if it becomes problematic enough (however dramatic that could end up). This is just the nature of the fediverse, that platforms will differ on things like this. Again, if people start abusing that information from other platforms and instances, blocking, banning are options, as is the nuclear option of defederation with any such instances (which is a core balancing feature of the fediverse).

    As it presently stands, k/mbin are a minority of users on the threadiverse and so whatever their platform choices are don’t really affect the rest of the threadiverse.

    In the end, you can only make the best platform that you can. That k/mbin do something we don’t want to do isn’t a good reason for following suite. If anything, it’s a good reason to stick with what we prefer and continue to make the argument with them on their choices.

    Privacy and transparency are relevant but not decisive

    I agree it’s an issue that it seems votes are private when they aren’t. Again, I come back to the balance of affordances, and I think they’re better as they are than with public votes. However misleading the privacy situation is, it can be handled by being more transparent with users by providing warnings etc.

    Ultimately, the privacy problem on the fediverse is not going away any time soon … it’s the nature of decentralisation, and this should maybe be made more clear to more people! But making a better platform is a real problem in front of us right now and I think it’s better to focus on that than how the general issue of privacy or consistency with privacy is best served.

    Other platforms aren’t that relevant

    I think I saw someone mentioning in the GitHub dicussion that other platforms expose vote data. While true, many of those would be microblogging platforms (mastodon, twitter, bluesky etc), where, again, the balance of affordances becomes relevant. A “vote” there, normally called a “like” is a personal action between user accounts that are likely to follow each other with such being the core mechanic of the platform. On aggregators like lemmy/reddit, the core mechanic is making popular posts so that your content gets to the top of the feed (roughly anyway). While there’s a lot of overlap, there’s more angst here around what gets voted on and what doesn’t and less inter-personal accountability and bonding. Posts and discussions are more public affairs and less conversations between people.

    Technical can of worms

    I wonder if making votes public would create the need or desire for enabling more post-specific options for users, such as making a post that can’t be voted on or that doesn’t provide public voting data?

    What about the children!!

    In the end, my bet would be that at the scale that lemmy is at, it won’t make too much of a difference if votes were made public. I think some would definitely encounter more unpleasantness and some would definitely find voting a more stressful affair, but we’re cosy enough that we’ll cope. Going forward though, public voting for an aggregator feels dangerous and hard to undo. Yes, it could be technically removed, but if a culture is established that is accustomed to it and become desensitised to the negatives, they’ll probably want to hold on to it.

    • ericjmorey@discuss.online
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      25 days ago

      I agree with just about everything you said, except that it won’t be a technical can of worms to implement the change according to the devs.

      • maegul (he/they)
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        24 days ago

        Oh, I was more talking about the technicalities of doing anything that might become desirable once votes are public, such as opting-in to having your votes hidden or having a particular post’s votes hidden or whatever else may come out in response.