I thought it might be helpful to post the current site (lemmy.world) rules here to remind you nice people what they are. You can see them by following the link in the side bar.
General guidance on posting and participating:
Do not post about inflammatory, controversial subjects without a Content Warning. Ideally, you would not post about inflammatory subjects at all. However, it may be acceptable to do so in some cases, but it is never acceptable to post inflammatory content without hiding the content behind an appropriate Content Warning.
Do not post any type of nudity without a Content Warning.
Regarding Spam: We are not your free advertising platform. If you are here only to sell your products or services, you will be removed. Occasional posts of commercial links are OK, but when the vast majority of a user's posts are commercial in nature, we regard the account as a Spam account. Moderators will evaluate reports of Spam on a case by case basis.
Do not engage in name calling, ad hominem attacks, or any other uncivil behaviour. Criticize ideas, never people.
Do not report every post that upsets you. Please report posts that violate our rules but for others that you may find distasteful, or just don’t like, use the tools available to you. You can block the user or mute the conversation.
There's a difference between asking "Canadian liberals, why do you oppose such and such law?" and "Canadian libtards, why do you always do dumb stuff like opposing such and such?"
Sure, but the subject is the same; it's still posting about 'such and such', and the rule here is about subject, not framing.
If I need to put a content warning on a topic that could be inflammatory if someone appended 'you stupid fuck' to the end of it, then I need to put a content warning on everything, rendering it useless.
I respect the intent behind this, but I've been round internet (and pre-internet) discussion forums since the 80s, and this approach just muddies the water.
No, in principle it's possible to discuss them like civilized people. People usually don't on the internet, but it's not a logical impossibility or anything. "Karma" and political astroturfing don't really lend themselves to that, though, so on Reddit they usually were. This is supposed to be a chance to do it right, I think, along with a few other things.
The trolley problem is misused a lot. Outside a moral philosophy classroom and making trolley-problem jokes, there are better examples of paradoxes to dontological suppositions.
Sure, but the best ruleset I've ever seen actually work is "don't make us ban you". Everyone knows where they stand with that one.
Having blanket 'rules' that are enforced at-will under the pretense that they're actual rules, like anti-loitering laws... tend to get used less-transparently and more disingenously.
Sure, but the best ruleset I've ever seen actually work is "don't make us ban you". Everyone knows where they stand with that one.
Having blanket 'rules' that are enforced at-will under the pretense that they're actual rules, like anti-loitering laws... tend to get used less-transparently and more disingenously.
I don't agree about 1 and 4. Let the people speak by using their down and upvotes. That's the power behind a platform like this. That's how Reddit got big.
If you're going to be overly strict people will post and comment less and some might even fully avoid Lemmy.
Of course things like gore and NSFW pics and vids should be behind a content warning. But other things?
I've blocked communities I absolutely don't want to see and interact with. For everything else: down and upvotes.
On the other hand, what's the harm of a content warning? If you feel like you're okay clicking on something you've been warned about, you're not any worse off.
Number 4 also seems like basic etiquette to me. You can't always downvote and move on if someone decides to be a dick and hits home. Why blame the victim and not the perpetrator? There's no reason to be uncivil to begin with.
Content warnings can be a bad thing. It's the very first thing that's in most posts, and so it forces you to read it. Otherwise someone can just skip by because the the actual discussion of the topic is deep without a paragraph, and usually doesn't come out of nowhere