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this post was submitted on 23 Jun 2023
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Relaxed section for discussion and debate that doesn't fit anywhere else. Whether it's advice, how your week is going, a link that's at the back of your mind, or something like that, it can likely go here.
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this is a big reason, incidentally, we don't let you guys decide everything (and why we probably won't for a long time, if ever). we'd like to eventually be able to give you more input as a community member to directly influence things instead of indirectly giving us ideas, but even with a fairly vetted group like this which mostly gets the ethos we're going for it's very difficult to prevent a democratic community from eventually spiraling into its worse impulses. i can't imagine trying this same routine with a non-vetted, mostly open community.
"A person is smart, people are dumb panicky animals and you know it!"
I think it's a good way to go about things, Rome wasn't built in a day and a community isn't made with quotes and idioms (unlike my replies)
The theory I have, and it's something I want to test with tucson.social, is that a democratic community will ONLY work with local stakeholders. Internet randos will always ruin the democratic makeup of a community since they can be from anywhere and have conflicting allegiances. However, by ensuring that an online community is a mirror of the local community, there is a deeper respect for Democratic norms because the participants are actually a part of the community they affect. At least, that's my theory anyways. There will certainly be other problems in this model, but I believe it may be the only real way that an online community can self govern without falling prey to internet extremism.
Heck, all the talk I see about TOR concerns me. Like, what are you wanting to do on tucson.social that requires TOR? I get it for online-only communities that are meant for a global audience, but for something hyper local and meant for people who are (arguably) not oppressed by government restrictions on free speech, I just don't see the point.
Anyways I shall see if this even works. Perhaps a year later I'll be writing a post-mortem on the failure of tucson.social at the hands of extreme members of the community - or maybe I'll make an exuberant post about it's success in self-moderating/self-administration?
I think it's a bit silly to allow "democratic voting" on an open signup instance when there's this many bots hanging around with access to chatgpt.