• 1 Post
  • 18 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 20th, 2023

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  • Only posts that has been deleted the last view days were:

    Whistleblower says U.S. recovered ‘non-human’ biological material | UFO Hearing Due to not linking to a article.

    Adopt eight lifestyle changes to add 20 years to your life, researchers say Due to not being a current world event and a clickbait title.

    This are the last 4 days of posts that were deleted. I think the person who made the post deleted it himself. We are very carefull with deleting posts. Every voice should be heared, but to a certain extend of course. Deleting a post or comment is the last resort.




  • Haha no, but I understand it seems that way!

    I also moderate c/Games and some of the moderators of the big communities are in a Discord group for questions and helping each other out. Since moderating a community about world news is not a easy task with all the (strong) different opintions I suggested to help since this is not a one-man job.

    In order to become mod, you have to reply to a thread so the other moderators can assign you. Hence why I did that.

    Hopefully it is a bit more clear now. :)








  • Lemmy feels as a aplha/beta product that we ar all testing right now. Nothing wrong with that, in fact, I like Lemmy more then Reddit. But you cannot expect everyone to love it right now.

    For Reddit its clear: you sign up, you search for a community and you subscribe.

    Here, you sign up (if you don’t get the spinning wheel). You search for a community. Oh, it is on another instance. What is a instance? Then you browse and see different Lemmy websites. You get confused, you heard something about Fediverse but what is it?

    Also, there is no karma what important is for many users. Mod tools are extremly limited and all the apps you can use on mobile are in alpha/beta/in development.

    There should be a easy to understand welcome page upon sign-up and I think this needs to be prioritized if we want to welcome (more) mainstream users. The post that explains how Lemmy works on c/lemmyworld doesn’t cut it.