[There are] no stupid questions, but there sure are questions with an obvious axe to grind.
Wonder what he got banned for.
Removed by mod
It’s cool that you’re in here doing Baby’s First Anarchy and all, maybe you should do some reading on how anarchy and decentralized societies actually work and you won’t come across so… Like This?
But even if I agreed with the facile points you’re trying to make in this thread, you’re making them in the wrong place. This is a community about learning, and you’re here trying to influence people and win an argument. That’s not the type of question this community is built for. You are violating Rule 5.
But I guess if a mod removed your question for a rule violation, that would just be proving your point, am I right?
I think you’re starting from a false premise. “All power corrupts” is a demonstrably untrue maxim.
If it were true we would never have anyone with power over anything. Being the one in charge of taking the cat to the vet would somehow be corrupting.
Because some of us remember how the internet was without moderators, and how it went to shit early 2000’s when “everyone” started using it.
25 years ago mods were rarely needed beyond booting a couple of spammers and getting rid of the occasional goatse and tubgirl. Now platform-wide efforts are needed to combat csam and gore.
There has to be an algorithm. A crowdsourced wisdom. Individuals can’t be trusted. From spez to the very mods here.
Whenever I hear someone suggest “an algorithm” without elaborating further, I’m usually correct in presuming that it makes as much sense as “a wizard will use magic”. The other times it’s usually someone suggesting blockchain. Sometimes it’s both.
Or, hear me out, collaboration across networks. That’s what lemmy does. And it’s nothing new.
I offered an alg up there in the thread. Browse for 1.5 seconds, you’ll find it.
And I saw it. What’s your fix for botnets and brigading?
An algorithm gets programmed… By who? T Its the cover Facebook takes. “Well we didn’t mean to radicalized thousands of people, we just had an algorithm feed them addictive and increasingly political videos until they were”.
well I offered one up there in the thread.
but there’s no individual mods here …
You parse sentences like a bot.
Because the GIFT corrupts even more, and faster.
Also, the mods are subject to GIFT too. In all probability even even moreso.
Hello, yes, I think that I would be a great moral authority. I am just the person to tell people what they can and cannot say. That’s me to a T.
You don’t want that guy in charge in a million years.
Then do it with bots. Bots are uncorruptable or at least perfectly auditable.
Alright, we’ll write a bot that can accurately moderate arbitrary internet content with an acceptably low rate of false negatives and false positives.
You first.
Here’s an idea
When you read a post you vote it.
This vote is also sticks to the person who wrote it.
Whenever he posts, his post automatically get a (weighted) rating based on the history of your votes of his posts.
Also, any post he votes automatically gets a (weighted) rating, for you, on his recommendation, based on his rating.
This post voting rating propagates. And of course works for both positive and negative voting.
Then you filter however.
Everybody starts at 0. Which is also informative of course.
That just means that folk from vulnerable minorities each individually have to downvote every new troll account targetting them, until the person just moves on to a new troll account.
Which in turn is how you end up with communities full of nothing but white, straight middle class western cis men who think that trolling each other is a national sport.
The cracking-resistance of this system is in the voters who are smart enough to vote as they like (flatworms can do it, so can we) and the depth and complexity of an organic voter/votee history, which would be hard to fake or quickly synthesize.
Of course, yes, the proof requires pudding. A Lemmy fork? Ugh, it’s a lot of work. Maybe a friendly hs teacher can make it the class project.
You miss the point. Your approach requires the targetted minority to experience the hate first, and then react to it, and gives them no method of pro-actively avoiding the content from new sources. It also ensures that every member of the minority in the community in question has a chance to see it, and has to individually remove it.
That suits bigots fine, and unsurprisingly, isn’t sustainable for many targets of bigotry.
Your approach requires the targetted minority to experience the hate first
That isn’t so. There is vote propagation among peers.
If a trusted (upvoted) peer or peers downvotes a bigot (by downvoting the bigot’s posts) then you will see that bigot downvoted in your own perspective as well.
Okay, and if a new account posts CSAM, how does that get removed ASAP?
bots are only “uncorruptible” in so far as they are built “corrupt” at their very conception
but you can look at the code. That inhibits shenanigans
Unchecked, unanswerable power corrupts. On lemmy everyone is free to create their own sub. Heck they’re free to create their own instance. That makes the “power” of moderators pretty tame.
Compare that to the power a corporate CEO has over the typical employee. Especially since the 1970s and 1980s redefinition of the primary responsibility of the directors of a corporation to be “maximize shareholder value” instead of “maximize stakeholder value.”
Even in (small d democratic) politics, at least an aggrieved voter can run to replace a corrupt, abusive politician. Not many companies, probably no publicly traded ones, have a mechanism for the workers to replace the management. That’s where major corruption by power can be witnessed.
Just because some hall monitors let their title go to their heads, that doesn’t mean they wield power in any meaningful way.
You’re confusing petty tyrants and actual tyrants.
They control what I say. That’s pretty big.
They control what I say. That’s pretty big.
My, but you certainly have an outsized estimation of your own importance, don’t you?
No one is obligated to host what you have to say. You want to get your message out, find somewhere that will or host it yourself.
Like everyone else.
They control what I say
No they don’t. They just control whether you get to say it in that particular space.
Editors at publishing companies don’t “control” what I say just because they can choose whether or not to publish my book.
a minor personal inconvenience is not censorship
If you remove my words, that is literally censorship.
Don’t get semantic. Please.
If I disarm someone aiming a gun at my head, I’m literally physically attacking them. Whoa! /s
Power corrupts, but that doesn’t mean that we don’t need positions of power…
I don’t think that the type of power that a janny has is able to meaningfully corrupt the janny. At least, not in most cases; because it’s practically no power, like it or not your online community means nothing in the big picture.
Instead, I think that bad moderators are the result of people with specific moral flaws (entitlement, assumptiveness, irrationality, lack of self-control, context illiteracy) simply showing them as they interact with other people. They’d do it without the janny position, it’s just that being a janny increases the harm that those trashy users cause.
Why the alternatives that you mentioned to human moderation do not work:
- Bots - content moderation requires understanding what humans convey through language and/or images within a context. Bots do not.
- Voting - voting only works when you have crystal clear rules on who’s allowed or not to vote, otherwise the community will be subjected to external meddling.
Bots - content moderation requires understanding what humans convey through language and/or images within a context. Bots do not.
so, like. bots are programed by people. all they really do is put a buffer between the actions of a moderator and the (real) moderators.
Nicely rendered. You have given me food for thought.
Too limit the number of people getting PTSD from terrible images.
To quote Dr Cox: “People are bastard coated bastards with bastard filling.”
So we elect some people to be chief jerkfaces against all the other miserable sods, then the rest of us pricks have to bully the mods to keep things fair… or unfair in so many directions at once that the scales still balance out. Thus turning our weakness into strength.
Or at least, that’s the plan.
The worst are the good in heart, slinging bans and censors for the good of the underprivileged and downtrodden. They suck hairy balls.
hup, and there it is …
clear as mud. Come on, risk an opinion.
Because for anything that is built, someone else will set out to destroy or manipulate it for their own purposes. For example, spammers will use social media to try to boost their SEO and as an avenue for free advertising.
As much as I’d love if everyone could act with the best intentions towards others at all times, there is too much motivation and reward for anti-social actions. As a result, we have to have a complex system of rules and enforcement.
Yes, we need a control. But control by the worst of us is a bad control. And yes, there is a race to the bottom for control here.
I feel like you are close to asking good political science questions. Close. Are you advocating for anarchy? Or communism? No? Just a technocracy that “works”?
A self-reflective hivemind evolving towards moral perfection.
Then nothing will ever improve or get done, because perfection is a myth that varies from person to person and even at it’s base definition (the quality or state of being perfect: such as freedom from fault or defect) is an impossibilty since anything created by man is gonna be as faulty as we are…and for those that choose to follow it, what happens is they become hard procrastinators, because they’re setting stupidly high standards for themselves or others that border on impossible to keep.
There’s a reason why saying like “perfection is the enemy of good/ finished” and “aim for good, not perfect” exist.
Not even gonna touch on morality. That’s a whole other can of worms I’m too exhausted to open.