Liberals: we support free speech

also liberals: don’t allow you to downvote content you don’t like

  • @frippa
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    252 years ago

    Downvotes are esssential to understand if a post is misleading/plain false, just like the meme “following x tutorial on youtube after they removed dislikes”

    • @CoinOperatedBoi
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      02 years ago

      The communities which have content that requires factual accuracy ought to leave that moderation and the equivalent community involvement can be done (and is more effectively done) with comments. Downvotes lack context. It’s like seeing a downvotes question on StackOverflow. The reason why it was downvoted isn’t always clear

  • commet-alt-w
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    162 years ago

    their mods are very scared of the words “neoliberal” and “imperialist”

    • Star Wars Enjoyer OP
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      2 years ago

      one of their rules prevents users from asking for sources, too

      There’s no way to fairly define their “no sealioning” rule. Sealioning is when someone tries to shut down a debate by demanding sources… but like, that’s only a problem if someone makes an unsourced claim.

      Which, like, ya know. This rule creates a situation where unsourced claims that benefit the echochamber of the mods will never be forced to provide any proof of their claims, while ones that don’t benefit the mods will be brigaded with claims of “fake news”. This rule will only protect their echochamber, not make their discussions more civil.

    • Seanchaí (she/her)
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      2 years ago

      Edit: nevermind, sorry to give you a notification, actually don’t need an answer to any questions about how scoring works, I forgot I turned off seeing scores

  • @201dberg@lemmygrad.ml
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    112 years ago

    In fairness, and I’m not defending shit ass beehaw, but Hexbear also doesn’t have downvotes. It was mainly due to brigading. We don’t have as big of an issue with that here due to the way accounts are made but over there it was a bit bigger of a problem. It also forces actual engagement as you can’t just downvotes and not say anything. If you disagree you have to voice it. Which is also I feel why banning seems to happen a lot more over there lol. It seems like there’s often a lot of “friendly fire” over there sometimes because people can get heated over really minor shit that could have just been a quick downvote to disagree and then move on.

    I’m glad we have downvotes here though. And I like that instead of a static vote number it shows the actual number of up and down votes.

    • @CoinOperatedBoi
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      22 years ago

      Yeah downvotes were being widely used as a form of harassment against trans users there. Within the first week there were voting bots being spun up by spammers and people looking to otherwise disrupt the site’s launch. It wasn’t long before ever single thing posted by a known trans user and everything posted in the trans comm was downvoted like 4 times immediately after it was posted.

  • FossilPoet
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    2 years ago

    I don’t hate the model too much. I often feel downvoting contributes nothing. If something is so bad that it needs immensely downvoted, a better discussion is if it should be removed or responded to.

    You see other negative aspects of downvoting in the way lazy raiders from other instances will downvote bomb people they have individual issues with or whole threads. It doesn’t accomplish anything but it’s annoying.

    EDIT: Another thing I bring up sometimes and forgot about here is the way downvoting on Reddit in particular feels like offloaded moderation responsibility. One of my favorite parts of Lemmygrad is how well moderated it feels. People can and do disagree civilly and don’t seem to use the downvote much outside of comments that were going to get removed anyway or folks that were going to get banned. It feels better that way than letting the shitty comments stand on their own and in turn fuel more outrage. Why would we need to get so mad over smaller disagreements?

    • Star Wars Enjoyer OP
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      262 years ago

      the problem with not having downvotes is when people don’t have the energy to voice their displeasure with something, they’re entirely robbed of their voice. The majority of users on any given platform would much rather just downvote something and move on, and it’s important that they have the ability to do so. Because if someone posts some dumb shit but no one’s got the energy to dispute them, the poster is never forced to realize that they said something stupid.

      Removing downvotes could be argued as being ableist, in this regard. Some people just don’t have the mental energy to type out paragraphs to explain why something hurts them or is wrong. Some people simply can’t type, or use a voice to text. These users deserve a voice, no matter how small.

      • @darkcalling@lemmygrad.ml
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        2 years ago

        This is very much why I’m in favor of downvotes.

        Go look at a place like hexbear and you’ll see why downvotes are important. People can post the most ridiculous liberal and imperialist or deviationist nonsense crap there and because there are no downvotes at most people use the inline image-memes at them and move on but that doesn’t hide their text or its position in the thread and in fact engagement of that kind often makes it look more important and stand out and if they’re engaging in liberalism or counterrevolutionary behavior that has wide support (among lurkers, trolls, etc) they could be upvoted to the top of a thread while actual effort replies are scattered among several comments none of which may get as many upvotes.

        It allows a community to police itself, to silence problematic behavior without mods, to mark someone’s comment or post as bad without having to explain why. This is helpful to both seasoned comrades and newcomers who might be misled by something that on a site without downvotes (and full of people too tired to argue with every potential troll) has 9 upvotes but on a downvote enabled site would have 9 upvotes and 40 downvotes and thus be -31.

        Downvotes are the answer to bad faith gish galloping debaters, trolls, and operatives seeking to disrupt.

        That being said they can be used by those same groups which is why I think having a system that analyzes the signal to noise of downvote/upvotes, looks for those who consistently downvote things the rest of the community upvotes and and starts weighting their downvotes to only count every fifth time or something like that. But it’s a minor issue as long as you have good moderation and an active community.


        Edit: You could remove downvotes and prevent the infiltration of liberalism and deviation by having very vicious moderation and bannings tossed out for so much as glancing at others wrong too many times BUT downvotes are better because they’re soft moderation.

        They don’t remove someone with one bad take (or a few) permanently from a community but allow people to grow while showing that they’re clearly at odds with the community which may cause a reassessment of their incorrect ideas (peer pressure from the community writ large versus a faceless moderator who is easily dismissed as a fed, an uneducated person, a singular person with an agenda, etc). You still need bannings but it’s kind of a soft moderation system that nudges posters rather than going straight to banning and it gives legitimacy to the moderators. If someone has been downvoted repeatedly and is then banned, well the community clearly stands behind the mods in that they’ve repeatedly shown this person is posting bad.

        If the mods just go around banning people for their interpretation of behavior that would normally be resolved via downvoting then you get drama, claims of persecution, of moderator misconduct, of witch hunts, threats that the punished represent some portion of the community and must be given voice to air their grievances (something which cannot be debunked as without downvotes you can’t know how much of the community agrees vs disagrees). Which can also spiral into actual moderator abuse and excess because of the latitude granted and the perceived mandate to keep spaces clean of any whiff of liberalism, reaction, or ultra-ism which would normally be kept in check with downvotes.

        So, are downvotes perfect? No. But I think they’re better than the alternative of not having them.

      • FossilPoet
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        2 years ago

        Regarding the majority of users acting a specific way, I question how conducive that is to a true social space. That behavior almost entirely exists because of the way social media is structured and it’s not really social as much as there is no way for me offline to downvote someone. I might make a facial expression, but I’ve also assigned an identity to the displeasure that can continue into an interaction for better or worse. When I deface a flyer, I can be spotted and engaged. Downvoting has no equivalent and I wonder how much a numerical tally of anonymous opinion (almost like we are having a plebiscite every time someone speaks) is healthy. It can in fact silence people in a new way, probably part of what influenced a lack of total karma in Lemmy’s design akin to part of what is wrong with Reddit.

        Regarding ableism, I feel like that’s a stretch. I don’t know that I can agree with any right to comment on social media. If people want to run shitholes, they can and do, and people leave them for other communities which results in division that doesn’t always exist offline in other social communities with less permanent insight (comments last “forever” and can be searched on the fly). It’s like saying I have any right to exist in the house of someone who hates me. I don’t.

        Additionally, as pointed out above: downvoting is anonymous. I’m reluctant to assign agency of voice in that because of how flippantly it can be done and how unimportant it is regarded, unlike voting for presidents. You can recall a downvote; you cannot do so with a ballot. I am also not getting a real perspective out of it. I don’t know if you’re familiar with the livepolling they do during some debates on-screen, but it turns them into a spectacle. I feel like the same occurs here and Reddit with dunking and disbelief. I generally like to avoid that sort of thing. I want to hear from a disabled person to actually believe I have seen their voice in use, not a temporary feeling that can go as far as misunderstanding to hating one detail strongly.

        EDIT: Also man, I hate to say this because I generally feel like it’s low-hanging fruit, but “stupid” and “dumb” are ableist terms. I just find it ironic to have to jump on the front of defending against ableist accusations when I’m seeing that in the same breath. It’s silly as all hell. I feel like ableism here is a crutch to lean on. Anyone, not just the disabled, can be so mentally exhausted as to not want to engage, so just…don’t. Hell, I am even sometimes. I’d wager to say we all agree on more things than not, so if something is small enough to not delete the comment or ban someone but egregious enough to evoke a response? It’s probably not that bad at the end of the day.

        It feels disproportionate, and I want to clarify this particularly because you’re a mod and I am not, and I’m being told my position is ableist while you’re actually using ableist terms. People have made minor agreement with me and haven’t gotten downvoted, but every comment I’ve made in this thread has been downvoted twice while your comment is upvoted more times than mine has votes period. This shows more people here engage than not (as in, they tend to avoid the downvote in favor of a comment), yet downvoting is still generally used for less prosocial purposes. It feels disproportionate because it is and no one else is regarding the actual terms in context of the accusation. It’s a method for shutting down discussion, not a useful tool.

    • @panic@lemmygrad.ml
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      2 years ago

      You see other negative aspects of downvoting in the way lazy raiders from other instances will downvote bomb people they have individual issues with or whole threads.

      I’ve noticed trans positive posts and anti-racist post getting downvoted. You’re the voting system is letting bigots hide

      • FossilPoet
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        42 years ago

        How am I letting bigots hide? We don’t even know who is doing the downvoting due to the anonymity. Let them speak up and get banned or leave without engagement which leaves us for the better.

      • Seanchaí (she/her)
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        82 years ago

        Yeah, I gotta say, voting culture online is really not my jam. I want to discuss, not consume, and I think votes encourage more of the latter

          • Seanchaí (she/her)
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            62 years ago

            I’m of two minds. On one hand, it can encourage people to try to “score votes” rather than engage in the conversation in good faith. On the other hand, they serve very well to help reduce the amount of “this” or “I agree” comments that don’t add much of anything at all.

            • FossilPoet
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              -22 years ago

              The vote scoring bugs me. I genuinely do not care for the opinions of every bystander on a discussion if they’re not willing to voice them.

                • Seanchaí (she/her)
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                  2 years ago

                  Thank you for this information! I wish it hid comment scores as well though, I don’t think I’ve ever even noticed a post score, I only ever see comment scores

                  Edit: nevermind, it does hide comment scores apparently, they were just still showing for me for a few minutes there

                • FossilPoet
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                  2 years ago

                  That’s cool as hell actually, I’ll probably do that. I hate trying to decipher why someone else got downvoted and would rather let their words stand on their own instead of being influenced by it.

      • @darkcalling@lemmygrad.ml
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        2 years ago

        On hexbear people rarely offer substantive rebuttals to bad points. They use inline image memes/gifs and move on. Which doesn’t actually debunk the point and might leave some lurker thinking “huh they have a good point, people don’t like it but they won’t say why so they must have no rebuttals”. And that doesn’t create a good culture. That’s a discord culture of memeing and that becomes expected. It doesn’t show dissent, it distorts views. Because you have like 8 reactionaries, liberals, ultras, or whatever upvoting their point, then a bunch of people, maybe 6 posting reaction memes in the comments that disagree but that 8 number next to it looks a lot more approving and impactful than those reaction comments downthread.

        Really bad illustration for your point but an excellent one for mine which is while people claim and hope this will happen. Guess what? The people who have the knowledge and time to do replies get burned out. There are more bad faith people out there with money, time, etc than there are communists who have the time to bat down every single new reincarnation of propaganda, a lie, ultra behavior, etc.

        This is why a lot of new learner spaces are heavily moderated. Because bad faith actors come in, use certain tactics and aim to burden, overwhelm, and burn out the regular users so they don’t have a chance to interact with genuine good faith new learners.

  • Amicese
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    1 year ago

    deleted by creator

    • @201dberg@lemmygrad.ml
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      42 years ago

      I think the way it’s done here is a good intermediate between no downvotes vs what most places do with the total score only. I like that we can see the number of up and down votes. I like to be able to see the number of ppl that disagree with me or that I’ve pissed off. lol

      But Hexbear removed downvotes and it’s not to bad over there. It does push ppl to give counter points and actually communicate more… although I feel like it also causes some disagreements to become overheated and someone always ends up banned. Pros and cons to it.

      • @panic@lemmygrad.ml
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        12 years ago

        I’ve seen trans positive posts getting downvoted time and time again on almost every platform that uses them. It drives me crazy that people ignore how this is used on the internet when you’re part of a minority.

    • Catraism-Stalinism
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      22 years ago

      there could be an option to turn it off for those who want it