This series of single word spam has 1 vote each:
https://beehaw.org/comment/2351412
Yet there are responses to the same comment with many more upvotes. Why don’t the higher valued comments rise above the comments with a score of 1?
This series of single word spam has 1 vote each:
https://beehaw.org/comment/2351412
Yet there are responses to the same comment with many more upvotes. Why don’t the higher valued comments rise above the comments with a score of 1?
It’s a Lemmy problem.
If you want a “transparency workaround”, it may help to know that Lemmy is kind of a wrapper for Mastodon, with Lemmy “communities” just being Mastodon users who “boost” some comment (Lemmy “post”) and the subsequent replies. Check a Lemmy discussion from some Mastodon servers, and you may notice not all of them honor Lemmy removal requests, leaving copies of posts, comments, discussions, etc… even copies of some CSAM.
If you want to contribute some code, an idea would be enhancing the cross-post feature, and allowing posts to get “moved” from one community to another (from Mastodon’s point of view, a simple matter of a different “Lemmy community” user boosting the same post).
I appreciate the background & history… and the workaround sounds quite useful until Lemmy evolves more.
Let’s not get ahead of ourselves. I would have to fork it just to get it out of MS Github and into an ethical work environment. And from there I would have to learn 2 or 3 new languages IIUC. I’m merely a user, or tester at best, trying to just get an understanding of the problems… not even yet at the stage of digging through existing bug reports. When I wrote what you quoted, I did not even know yet if the tool was limited or if it’s malconfigured, or if a mod wasn’t making full use of the software. PenguinCoder hinted in another thread there is a thread hiding option in one of the Lemmy forks but did not elaborate. Superficially that sounds like a more appropriate mechanism for an off topic thread if it works the way it sounds.