0 Followers
0 Following
0 Posts

There is zero chance he resigns, nor should he. This is just a distraction.

What the progressive left should be doing --> Focusing on the most egregious and harmful Republican policies and explaining to everyday Americans how these policies will make their lives harder and objectively worse.

What the progressive left is doing --> Whining about a moderate Senator in their own party who is from a state in which a majority voted for Trump.

This is the same conversation that followed around Manchin and we finally drove him out. Was Republican taking that very seat with 69% of the vote a win? We’ll probably never see another democrat elected in West Virginia in our lifetimes…

Time and time again, Democrats sabotage themselves.

Reminds me of the HD decryoption key fiasco on digg. Everyone just kept posting it over and over in every thread. Moderators started banning people. People started jumping ship to Reddit.

It’s what caused the first digg exodus, with the better known redesign failure being the second.

What if we built a system of beacon transmitters that sent out pulses and then used recievers that would compare arrival times of those pulses to make a measurement, thus establishing positional location?

We could call it the Long Range something or other. Need a catchy name!

Avoid reddit. Don’t provide engagment.
My God. This is world changing. This is amazing.
Compact view is quite reminiscent of old reddit, and it the viewing style I ran in Apollo. Thanks for all your hard work! Apps like this make a world of difference in driving adoption.

Removed as moderator of /r/Celebrities after 14 years

https://lemmy.world/post/316878

Removed as moderator of /r/Celebrities after 14 years - Lemmy.world

They did not provide a reason. There was no further dialog. I just got a system message telling me I was removed. I was also silmultaniously shadow banned from Reddit and my posts and comments stopped showing up. I had created a post complaining about being removed as the moderator (the only moderator for over a decade) of a sub that I built from the ground up and donated literally thousands of volunteer hours to over the last 14 years. It had zero upvotes or downvotes or comments and was not visible as an anon user. In the end, I decided to rip the bandaid off and killed my 16.5 year account. I was one of the early supporters of Reddit (user #7758) and had left Digg for good in May of 2007 after the AAC controversy. They showed their authoritarian side in that moment and I knew Digg had reached their high water mark. Reddit is at that moment now. They won’t be dead tomorrow. They won’t be dead next week. However, it will also never be the same, and it’s only downhill from here. Much like Digg. Much like Myspace. I am sure there will be a blurb a few years from now as an addendum in some business journal how Reddit sold to a third party for an undisclosed sum and some Skittles… The future is the Fediverse and I’m glad I was forced to remove my Reddit crutch and dive in full force.

Our Crack Team of Developers is on the Case

https://lemmy.world/post/258631

Our Crack Team of Developers is on the Case - Lemmy.world

Interesting.

I came into this not having formed an opinion, but after reading their proudly linked founding manifesto and viewing some of the comments of the devs, including making light of the Ethnocide of Uyghurs, I'm quite sure they are the very definition of tankies.

That aside, as long as Lemmy the software is open source and people can freely choose with whom to federate, I don't see it being an issue.

I don't know why spezzit removed the ability to see visible downvotes. It was an instructive part of the core experience for many years. Today, if you see a comment at -5 you think people must hate it, but in the old days that comment would show up as say 50 / 55 and it would be clear it was a controversial comment rather than wholly reviled. Removing downvotes, removes contextual nuance of the group reaction, which accelerates more downvoting leading to groupthink rather than conversations.