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submitted 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago) by Ategon@programming.dev to c/meta@programming.dev

Hey everyone. Some of you may have seen the recent announcement with blahaj to defederate with the instance. Ive been handling things privately and wanted to do an announcement to catch you all up on the results of that

#1: Background knowledge

Realized that not everyone knows how the instance is structured so figured I would do a little section in the front to go over that (especially for visitors reading this from other instances)

We currently have 8 admins in the instance. Of those 2 people are currently lead admins (snowe and I). Majority of admins are part of the community team but not all of them (people are split between infrastructure, development, and community). I was planning out a team page similar to what lemmy.world has to go over this with a bit more detail and that should be coming in the future. Main thing though is its intentionally structured so one person doesnt solely have power (hence the two leads). If one person ends up messing up theres the other lead and the rest of the admin team to talk with them about it and help them do better in the future.

#2: What happened?

There was a thread in lemmy.ml about the hogwarts legacy game winning a steam award. For reference for the following images + description, snowe is the other lead admin for the instance apart from me and the other people are various other users

There was a conversation that ended up essentially devolving into a slap fight within this post (ive purged the entire conversation so people dont stumble onto it in the future but ill post images here with them for archiving reasons and to explain it)

^ These comments were what initially started it. Essentially it was an argument about the hogwarts legacy game being or being not transphobic

^ Later in the argument

^ One branch that ended up getting started due to the frontend snowe uses on mobile not showing pronouns (how most instances handle it currently is its appended to the end of the display name but some frontends choose to ignore the display name and just do the username instead)

(edit: changed the word triggered to started to make it more clear what definition of triggered I used. Forgot that tends to not be common usage)

There are other branches but it is a very large amount to screenshot and dont want this to completely flood this post. Everything should be available in the modlogs still if you want to dig a bit deeper or I can send other screenshots in the replies on this post if youre interested in what was said for certain parts

#3 Aftermath

Due to the argument above blahaj chose to defederate with programming.dev which was going to take effect 48 hours after their announcement on it. (This is due to the person in the conversation being one of our lead admins which is ultimately understandable as they represent the instance)

snowe has sent a message apologizing to ada (the lead admin for blahaj). I dont know the contents of what was said but if they want the two of them can choose to publicize it.

One of our admins should not have escalated the situation and participated in this slap fight so on behalf of the admin team here were sorry about that

Internally we have a guidebook for admins to follow for the various aspects of the instance (moderation, applications, etc.). Ive refined this guidebook with a couple new rules for admins that should be taking effect in the future

  • admins will be required to have two accounts, one for admin activities and one for non admin activities. This is how some admins have already been interacting in the fediverse and basically makes it so comments done on the non-admin account should not be taken as that admin speaking on behalf of the instance. Generally the admin account will be things done relating to admin duties (e.g. my posts here in meta) while the non-admin account is other various conversations. Admins can be as anonymous as they want with the non-admin account similar to how our users here can be as anonymous as they want with their accounts
  • im adding in some guidelines for tone while chatting for the admins so comments made that are on behalf of the instance should be respectful and not devolve to slap fights

Like I said before in #2 ive also purged the entire conversation to avoid people stumbling onto it and seeing a slap fight with an admin that has since apologized. As the community exists on lemmy.ml I cant fully do this due to how federation works in lemmy but the mods in the community have been doing the same which should federate.

This should not have happened in the first place and we as an admin team will be better going forward

I hope the blahaj instance sees our actions and chooses to reverse the defederation decision but at the end of the day its their instance and they can choose whoever they want to federate with (note federation is done directionally. I will still leave our direction of federation open)

Edit: Blahaj stopped their defederation (shown in an edit on their announcement) so the two instances will still be federated both directions going forward

Another edit: its a work day, its midnight here, and some comments here are also devolving into slapfights. Ive locked the post since this has already taken up most of my free time to try to handle and moderate this. My dms are always open if you want to dm me regarding the situation

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[-] RobotToaster@mander.xyz 81 points 10 months ago

Instances getting de-federated over such trivial things is going to be the death of lemmy.

[-] jeremyparker@programming.dev 9 points 10 months ago

It's not just the trivial things themselves -- it's also the idea that admins will have to police their users for trivial missteps, under threat of defederation, so no one will want to run a server.

[-] Nougat@kbin.social 50 points 10 months ago

I've been kind of watching this from the sidelines. Requiring separate admin and general use accounts is definitely a good idea, but it doesn't absolutely solve the problem of "someone who possesses greater power expressing themselves in confrontational ways." Once you're wearing an "admin hat," you can't ever really take it off, and you have to know that your actions are always going to be under greater scrutiny, regardless of the user account in question.

However.

I'm a big proponent of "we call people what they want to be called," but this is the very first time I have ever heard that using generic pronouns is somehow consciously offensive. I get that if Party A has made undeniably clear what pronouns they use, and Party B insists on using generic pronouns, yeah, that could be an action consciously intended to offend or put down - but I also think that it's not necessarily and always that way. Context matters, and the context in this particular incident suggests (to me, at least) that transphobia has absolutely nothing to do with it.

Language is an ever changing thing, although it may change more slowly than desired. When you're talking about extremely foundational bits of language - like pronouns - it takes a huge amount of effort (especially for older people, of which I am one) to get your brain to change gears and use the words and thoughts that you want to. I know this from personal experience. When I am talking to or about a person in my own family, who I have known since his birth 18+ years ago, it is extremely difficult to adjust to a "new paradigm," even when "new" means "several years in the making." I suspect that I will always have to make conscious efforts to think and speak in ways that I want to, and that I won't always get it right. Just because I don't always get it right doesn't make me a transphobe.

Forklift that situation over to text on a screen with someone who is essentially anonymous to me, with whom I may never have interacted with before, it's highly likely that I'm going to get it wrong even if I try. Then, if I use the generic pronoun "they" in order to avoid misgendering someone, and I get smacked down for that? That's just plain unreasonable, and I have no interest interacting with anyone who would throw shade for that reason.

For blahaj to threaten defederating with an entire instance over just that is completely unreasonable. Maybe that threat was taken based on an incomplete or inaccurate understanding of the facts. Maybe there are facts that I don't know. What I do know is that just because someone uses strong language to disagree with someone else doesn't mean there's any bigotry at play.

[-] jeremyparker@programming.dev 16 points 10 months ago

Just to make we fully exhume the original argument -- I hang out with a lot of trans and nb people and I've noticed people just saying "they" to everyone, and I kinda love it. If everyone's just they then no one needs pronouns. The first part of the long term mission, to destabilize gender completely, starts with shit like that - taking all gender out of language.

[-] Ategon@programming.dev 6 points 10 months ago

For the first paragraph: year fair. I'll likely do some more additions to our admin guidelines for expected conduct on non admin accounts and I can do a general expected conduct when participating in the instance (for all instance users) for behaviors that anyone shouldn't do regardless of whether they're an admin or not. Can add that to the support site im making

Most of the pronoun situation just stems from discrepancies in different frontends where the "main" frontend shows it but most people are on mobile apps that don't show it leading to people assuming visibility when that isnt the case. In your second paragraph people who don't realize the discrepancy in these frontends may think they're making it clear as you say

But yeah overall things in the conversation wasnt done maliciously and was able to be resolved fine

There was some other branches other than the pronoun situation although that was one of the main ones pointed out to me for defederation reasons

[-] lemann@lemmy.dbzer0.com 47 points 10 months ago

I honestly admire the transparency of the updates on the p.d meta community. Thanks for sharing the background, despite the situation not being ideal

[-] onlinepersona@programming.dev 40 points 10 months ago

From the screenshots, it looks like snowe wasn't being aggressive at all. And getting hate for using "they" is excessive. It's a shorter way of saying "that person". Blahaj (a blue shark from IKEA? I don't get it) shouldn't be this touchy about stuff. It's like a C programmer getting offended about being called a programmer.

CC BY-NC-SA 4.0

[-] th3raid0r@tucson.social 24 points 10 months ago

I'm in agreement here, and given Blahaj's trigger-happy nature when it comes to defederation, I'm not sure I care all that much.

I've seen them defederate so many other instances for "wrong-think" and I don't think Snowe should feel like he's in the wrong here.

It's only a matter of time before they defederate from my own instance, tucson.social, because I don't think 100% like them. I apparently support trans genocide because... checks notes... I don't think that doxxing far right reactionaries/extremists is an effective tactic for garnering sympathy and building a movement.

Yup, that's it. Apparently that opinion makes you a Nazi sympathizer in these circles.

[-] toasteecup@lemmy.world 8 points 10 months ago

I haven't been outted as a wrong thinker yet, but I did have a conversation with another Jew (I'm a Jew for context) and apparently I'm wrong for not thinking the goblins from Harry Potter are antisemitic.

[-] spacecowboy@sh.itjust.works 6 points 10 months ago

I caught that. This whole thing is absolutely childish and ridiculous.

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[-] Gormadt 13 points 10 months ago

Shit I default to they usually until I get corrected

It's more inclusive than just making assumptions plus working in a customer facing position I got in the habit of gender neutral terms and holiday agnostic seasonal greetings

[-] onlinepersona@programming.dev 10 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago)

Exactly. I barely look at usernames, because they are not worth remembering. "they" is my default.

CC BY-NC-SA 4.0

[-] Gormadt 9 points 10 months ago

Off topic question though, why do you have a creative commons link in your comments?

As someone who does a lot of 3D printing and modeling I'm pretty familiar with the "Attribution, non-commercial, share-alike" one but I've never seen someone tag all their comments as it before

[-] towerful@programming.dev 11 points 10 months ago
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[-] lukini@beehaw.org 10 points 10 months ago

Snowe even proved they can't see the pronouns. Seems like the other person chose to continue to be mad for no reason.

[-] Supermariofan67@programming.dev 34 points 10 months ago

I think it would be reasonable to defederate from blahaj.zone. A majority of the toxic, negative, and aggressive comments I see on Lemmy seem to come from users of either blahaj or hexbear. The admin very intentionally curates a cult-like community by posting provocative posts and then banning everyone who expresses even slight disagreement. They have engaged in and doubled down on false accusations of CP against the lemmynsfw admins, which demonstrates that they are a risk for other instances be federated with. I normally very strongly oppose dedederation, but I think blahaj is a great example of when it makes sense. This is because the admin seems intent on starting drama rather than working with other instances to resolve conflict. It almost feels like some form of religious extremism lol

I of course block the instance from my account to avoid seeing posts from there, but toxic users are still visible on comments.

[-] UlrikHD@programming.dev 18 points 10 months ago

The team is fairly unison in wanting to avoid defederation as much as possible and leave it users to filter out content they personally don't enjoy. Programming is a big and diverse field, and we want to make it as open as possible to everyone. Unless the instance breaks our own rules as described in the sidebar under "federation rules", I feel like it would be an overreach by us to defederate an instance due to personal opinion.

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[-] chicken@lemmy.dbzer0.com 12 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago)

Idk, often when I see someone with pronouns in the username I hover over the name to check the instance, and normally if they're being an asshole in the comment it's hexbear and if they're being nice and reasonable it's blahaj, so to me it doesn't seem quite the same.

[-] IronKrill@lemmy.ca 7 points 10 months ago

Eh, best to not get into a pissing contest when you don't have to. We need instance blocking to optionally affect comments as well as posts and then instances can stick to only defederating the worst of the worst (illegal, spam, or troll instances).

[-] popcar2@programming.dev 6 points 10 months ago

I generally agree they're very dramatic but defederation isn't necessary. If you'd like you can block it at a user level, there's no reason for bad blood between instances and users getting caught in the crossfire.

[-] Album@lemmy.ca 28 points 10 months ago

This is so dumb you should defed with Blahaj in principle. I don't even use this instance but it's kinda pathetic that you guys have to deal with this.

Apparently defending oneself from attacks in a discussion is "aggression". No consequences for the others in that thread I assume.

It's also completely insane that the use of "they" to refer to anyone would be soft transphobia. That's one of the main purposes of that word - especially on the internet. Some languages don't even have he/she it's literally just THEY in their language e.g Tagalog has 'sila' for singular 'they' and 'sha' for plural they. There is no he/him/her/she in that language.

[-] Corbin@programming.dev 11 points 10 months ago

The conversation was in English, though. I'm sympathetic to your argument -- if we all spoke Lojban, as we ought to, then pronouns would be computable from display names and nouns would be non-gendered; however, when speaking English, please be aware of the centuries of colonialism baked into the linguistics.

[-] Album@lemmy.ca 15 points 10 months ago

Yeah sure like blacklist instead of exclusion list. I get it. Really I do. I feel like saying you're progressive instantly means you aren't - so I still won't say it.

They/them is a way to refer to anyone without making ANY assumptions about gender - because it's entirely unnecessary to do so. I don't see how calling someone who identifies as female 'they' has any affect on someone who is transgendered or specifically prefers they/them identifiers. It sounds like the intent there is that they/them is exclusive for transgender...which as of this time I can't agree with.

If it's done intentionally to disparage trans allies then sure - that makes good sense - but this clearly wasn't done in bad faith.

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[-] kogasa@programming.dev 11 points 10 months ago

This is so dumb you should defed with Blahaj in principle.

Fucksake. Can we please stop escalating petty grievances to instance-wide disruptions? It shouldn't even be on a hypothetical table.

[-] spacecowboy@sh.itjust.works 20 points 10 months ago

This is so stupid lmao

[-] elint@programming.dev 19 points 10 months ago

I'm glad everything worked out in the end. I hope snowe learned a couple of lessons from this. One about how to interact and respect the lived experiences of marginalized peoples, but also a lesson about not engaging with hexbear trolls in the first place.

[-] roguetrick@kbin.social 13 points 10 months ago

Dumb. You ban users and defederate for poor moderation. Granted, folks can run their instance into the ground however they want.

[-] SheeEttin@programming.dev 7 points 10 months ago

I'm surprised mods and admins don't have the option to choose not to distinguish their posts and comments.

[-] Ategon@programming.dev 7 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago)

There is a distinguish option that adds a shield but its a bit redundant since it marks you with the flairs anyways

Only way to really get around it for now is the multiple accounts

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this post was submitted on 10 Jan 2024
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