@JPthePirate has created their account 2 months ago (like many redditfugees) and created 40+ communities, only to never log back in. The communities are for the most part empty and completely unmoderated - and a lot of them are “brand names” like the names of videogame studios (!bethesda, !blizzard, !devolverdigital, !activision) and somewhat popular videogames like !cultofthelamb and !diablo4.
Would it be possible to delete the ones that are completely empty anyway so that users who actually want to do something with those communities are able to create them from scratch?
PriorProject@lemmy.world 1 year ago
The more normal transfer path is to offer to take over a specific community or communities by:
This is better than mass deletion because it keeps whatever small list of existing subscribers and post content intact across the transition. For moderation, Lemmy world admins will get notified of reports and can address anything that violates instance rules.
justlookingfordragon@lemmy.world 1 year ago
About the moderation guidelines …
They did not do that even after 2 months.
They also did not do that, even tho it is an action that takes all of five minutes to do.
The only mod is simply not present, so noone is actually moderating.
People are a lot less likely to participate in a community if the first thing you notice is that the creator doesn’t give a sh*t about it. And like I explained in another comment, “regular” users can not fix this - only a mod can add a banner, the sidebar, rules, featured posts etc. so even on the off chance that someone decides to post there despite the first bad impression, the community will continue to have that first bad impression anyway.
schmidtster@lemmy.world 1 year ago
A mod not answering a request would break which rule to report them under?
If these places are empty without posts, the moderation is being done since none is to be done.
PriorProject@lemmy.world 1 year ago
All of which is to say, there are lots of way to detect abandoned communities when post volume is low, and the process I highlighted is the standard way to request a takeover.