I wanted to provide a brief analysis of the top comments on blahaj lemmy and compared to lemmy world (who defederated from hexbear preemptively). The red comments favored federation and the blue ones favored defederation.

Initially I was browsing Blahaj Lemmy and couldn’t believe how many top comments favored federation.

When I started browsing from Lemmy World (who preemptively defederated) the top comments were way more favorable to defederation. On the top comment, it looks like 50 upvotes (more than half) came from hexbear users.

Whether intentional or not, this is brigading. I’m happy that they’re defederated. I really don’t think that individual/local blocking is good enough since this has the ability to steer the direction of a lot of discourse, and I’d just not see it, but it would affect our instance the same. The effects of brigading still happen. I’d still see the same number of upvotes that would imply sentiment different to the actual users of the instance.

Also, is there any proper way to see where upvotes come from? I feel like this would be a good tool to vet botting, trolling and brigading. Also instance only communities (though I’m on lemmy.ca rn lmao) would be good.

  • @BiNonBi
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    911 months ago

    I don’t think this is the proper way to do this analysis. I believe the lemmy.world vote counts should be the same as blahaj.zone. It will still include the votes from hexbear. The only difference would be that lemmy.world’s view will include the down votes from lemmy.world itself. Those won’t federate over to blahaj.zone since down voting is disabled on the instance.

    It should be possible to do your analysis though. It will take getting a copy of the vote history for the comments on the post. Every admin of an instance that federates with blahaj.zone has a copy of that. Then you will have to run some queries on the database to filter votes by the instance they originate from.

    • MlemmerOP
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      11 months ago

      It’s definitely not “proper” lol. I’m pretty sure it doesn’t count the votes though. I could be wrong in which case why was the difference so large. It’s still true when viewing from Beehaw, which has downvotes disabled.

      • @BiNonBi
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        1011 months ago

        Now that I’ve looked at lemmy.world, beehaw and lemm.ee myself, you might be closer to right than I initially thought. The amount of comments in the first thread on the blocking instances, lemmy.world and beehaw, is much less than the federated instances, blahaj.zone and lemme.ee. The vote amounts on the blocking instances agree with each other and the amounts on the federated instances agree with each other.

        I think that’s sufficient evidence to conclude something is up. I’m going to suspect lemmy.world and beehaw filtered out hexbear comments and votes when they federated the post. This would suggest brigading from hexbear users. But I would need to view the vote database to be sure.

        • @nan
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          8 months ago

          deleted by creator

          • AdaMA
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            1611 months ago

            I think for it to be brigading would require a planned response

            It wasn’t coordinated as such, but they did link to our post in their dunking/call out community, and that post hit their front page. That was the source of a huge amount of traffic from Hexbear

            • @nan
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              8 months ago

              deleted by creator

          • @BiNonBi
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            411 months ago

            From my understanding of how federation and communities work is that the instance hosting a given community receives the postal, comments and votes for that community from other instances and then sends the combined data out to other instances that requests that data. Users from instances that aren’t federated could still interact if they both used a community on a third party instance they were both federated with. But I could be wrong about all that.

            And your right. Brigading is probably too strong of a word outside of evidence of coordinating action.