World News
A community for discussing events around the World
Rules:
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Rule 1: posts have the following requirements:
- Post news articles only
- Video links are NOT articles and will be removed.
- Title must match the article headline
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- Recent (Past 30 Days)
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Rule 2: Do not copy the entire article into your post. The key points in 1-2 paragraphs is allowed (even encouraged!), but large segments of articles posted in the body will result in the post being removed. If you have to stop and think "Is this fair use?", it probably isn't. Archive links, especially the ones created on link submission, are absolutely allowed but those that avoid paywalls are not.
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Posts and comments must abide by the lemmy.world terms of service UPDATED AS OF 10/19
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Similarly, if you see posts along these lines, do not engage. Report them, block them, and live a happier life than they do. We see too many slapfights that boil down to "Mom! He's bugging me!" and "I'm not touching you!" Going forward, slapfights will result in removed comments and temp bans to cool off.
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Rule 7: We didn't USED to need a rule about how many posts one could make in a day, then someone posted NINETEEN articles in a single day. Not comments, FULL ARTICLES. If you're posting more than say, 10 or so, consider going outside and touching grass. We reserve the right to limit over-posting so a single user does not dominate the front page.
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Recommendations
For Firefox users, there is media bias / propaganda / fact check plugin.
https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/media-bias-fact-check/
- Consider including the article’s mediabiasfactcheck.com/ link
view the rest of the comments
Enough folks are here for me. In fact, I'd argue that this is right about the right size, and that if we get that much bigger, it will become a mess like anything else.
I've spoken about it with some others, and we think that part of the problem with major sites like reddit is the scale itself.
That at a certain point, no amount of modding tools can save you from the flood of users doing things you have to moderate.
It's why I think moderation needs to be a paid position (a la MetaFilter), and a site needs to have a max userbase tailored to how many mods they have available.
When you add more users, you're actually exponentially increasing user interactions. Most of the time, you're actually moderating interactions between users than actual individual users, so you must add moderators exponentially as your userbase grows because the potential connections between users are growing exponentially compared to the number of users.
There's not enough people in niche communities outside of tech stuff. I'd love a community for my city similar to reddit, but no one is there. I post there, but it's empty.
I know we all want to hang out in a Marquette community, but isn't midwest.social close enough?
Not really.
Some big things have inauspicious starts.