Caoldence222

joined 1 year ago
[–] Caoldence222@lemmy.world -1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

then go to an instance that doesn't have downvotes... Admittedly those instances are also almost exclusively liberal or leftist tho lol

[–] Caoldence222@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Wasn't trying to stir shit, its just interesting (though entirely understandable) how that site gets left out of these kinds of posts. It has a lot of inertia to still have 1500 monthly active users, and a huge amount of content, after >3 years of being split off from reddit and receiving little outside attention

[–] Caoldence222@lemmy.world 8 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (3 children)

it does basically boil down to what other people have said but I'll elaborate.

The reasons are political disagreements from the admins of lemmy.world, and them taking the site's zealous left-wing opinions and shitposting culture as prima-facie evidence that hexbear users cannot be trusted not to break lemmy.world rules (unstated which rules) by pushing "their beliefs and ideology". It almost sounds reasonable until you think about it like, at all. It's an explicitly political instance (though honestly >50% of the posting is just news of the day and banter), so of course the users will by and large have those political opinions and post them. As long as they do so within the rules of lemmy.world I don't see the issue personally.

[–] Caoldence222@lemmy.world 5 points 1 year ago (1 children)

It's fairly big relative to other lemmy instances because it's been around for over 3 years, and it was a lifeboat site for people that frequented r/chapotraphouse before it was banned from reddit (which was a relatively huge sub).

Over the past year or so they worked to switch from a heavily modified fork of lemmy back to a more modern upstream version of lemmy, mostly by redeveloping and contributing features that were missing, like custom emojis, to upstream lemmy. So now there's more attention being paid since it is now using a federation-compatible version of lemmy and intends to actually federate with a limited subset of the lemmyverse

[–] Caoldence222@lemmy.world 14 points 1 year ago (16 children)

guessing this doesn't include hexbear.net because they aren't federated yet but they have 270k posts and 3.6 million comments on their own, mostly well before the start of this graph, so it ought to start at more like 500k

But I'm so glad to see lemmy taking off properly, not just used for some niches. FOSS internet infrastructure that is accessible to end users is so important, it safeguards a lot of important freedoms, etc.

[–] Caoldence222@lemmy.world 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

I would suggest to watch the documentary about the guy who was behind the darkweb site - the silk road.

wait are you trolling? because that guy got caught in the most low-tech way possible. He used the same username when promoting the newly-created Silk Road as he had on a programming forum previously, where he publicly posted his email address containing his full name. All it took to ID him was a bored IRS investigator with access to google search

[–] Caoldence222@lemmy.world 3 points 1 year ago

It is possible to anonymize IP addresses in the logs at the nginx level, I wish more instances would do it.

[–] Caoldence222@lemmy.world 4 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I mean they can't and don't try to stop you from lying, or even setting it to "none/use name". All it does in reality is filter out transphobes who get triggered by the requirement, and provide a practical way of knowing what to call someone, rather than the reddit approach of always defaulting to "he" (or maybe they in some more liberal subs)

[–] Caoldence222@lemmy.world 4 points 1 year ago (1 children)

The original phrasing was flawed, yes, but blahaj.zone isn't ideologically neutral.

They are a queer instance, but they aren't just a queer instance, are they? They don't merely accept anyone who is queer (queer racists, or TERF lesbians, for example, wouldn't be welcome), nor do they ban people who aren't queer at all. So the dividing line is ideological.

The line is more like: support for queer rights. They even specifically outline a philosophy of inclusion and empathy in their sidebar. But we wouldn't ban them for trying to spread their ideology

[–] Caoldence222@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago

maybe take a look for yourself... you probably don't agree with everything posted there, but the cherrypicked examples aren't representative of the whole instance. In fact there's a sizable amount of people on hexbear.net that don't want to federate period because they don't want to get into political slapfights and be exposed to transphobia/otehr bigotry

[–] Caoldence222@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

Its true in the most literal sense though. I mean hexbear.net originally was called chapo.chat, and was formed after the banning of r/chapotraphouse from reddit, over posting about John Brown and his killing of slaveowners

[–] Caoldence222@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Looking at the front page things aren’t as bad as the federation rules seem to imply, but on the other hand that’s just what the post-moderation popular vote is like.

you can read the modlog and see what is removed, or sort by new if you want to see less popular posts. It's not incredibly inflammatory stuff

It's a pretty isolated community, so yeah, they may be hostile to outsiders coming into their communities, but people that aren't starting political slapfights are generally treated fine

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