Comment on Thoughts on r/antiwork drama and implications for Lemmy

Tomat0@lemmy.ml ⁨2⁩ ⁨years⁩ ago

IMO any such changes towards democratization would probably be best suited to a different Fediverse project entirely given how much it alters the structure of the genre of site Lemmy falls under.

I think the real lesson from the whole fiasco is that people shouldn't place more political expectations on a subreddit than its capable of handling. Reddit/Lemmy has specific uses it's good for, and things it's not good at. Upvotes, subcommunities, and central moderation all contribute to the problems with Reddit but at the same time they stay because they've proven to be the most effective at doing what Reddit is built to do.

When it comes to making a sort of rallying point for things like what /r/antiwork was going after, IMO the whole structure of the site would have to be re-thought. And while I think we should begin with experimenting with platform design more, I don't think it's a good idea to burden platforms which were designed to act as direct alternatives to mainstream platforms with unnecessary features which may or may not work out.

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