cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ca/post/15541577

The extension shinigami eyes is back.

Quick context: the extension allows you to see which profiles are supportive or transphobic and it wasn’t updated for 2 years.

I was worried it was abandoned. Hopefully we can get Ecosia and Lemmy supported and have it expanded it to cover racist/sexist profiles soon. I would like to donate to the developer if I could.

It is my favourite Firefox extension because it would protect you from seeing all the hate online and prevent unintentionally supporting a slimy transphobe😡 and it literally reveals to you people’s true colours.

2/10/2024

*support for blue sky *updated bloom filter *Fix colonization of Tumblr tags

  • @asdfasdfasdf@lemmy.world
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    54 months ago

    IDK, I feel like I still feel like I don’t agree with this approach. In fact, the entire name about “shinigami eyes” makes me think it’s inspired by Death Note, an anime about a guy with a twisted and wrong sense of justice, using shinigami powers to kill people he thinks are bad.

    E.g.

    1. What if someone said things like this, had a conversation, then changed their opinion? Why should they have that struck against them forever?
    2. Things can be easily misinterpreted, especially online through text. Are they talking about “never being a biological woman”? Having a uterus? Something else? Gender? Maybe they don’t understand the difference. A lot of people don’t. Mistakes are the first step toward understanding. Maybe they didn’t understand something, or maybe they worded something ambiguously. It’s easy to do.

    I think if we want to change people for the better, than means talking with them, interacting with them, and helping them to change.

    • @starman2112@sh.itjust.works
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      24 months ago
      1. This isn’t a moderation tool, it’s effectively a communal way to remember usernames of people who’ve been abusive. Do you have the same worry about people blocking you for your past views? I’ve said awful, transphobic, homophobic, and racist things under past usernames (part of the reason I switched to Starman was to distance myself from the persona I had 15 years ago), and I’m sure some people rightfully blocked me when they saw those comments. Personally I would rather someone see a red username over a comment now that I’m an ally than not see my comment at all.

      2. Like I said, they are strict. Unless you are unabashedly transphobic, you won’t even accidentally say something that might get you tagged. Kind of like how a white person doesn’t accidentally use racial slurs unless they’re racist. You shouldn’t have to worry about a video of you calling someone the n word going viral because you shouldn’t be calling people the n word in the first place.

      • @phdepressed@sh.itjust.works
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        34 months ago

        They are strict now, the slippery slope argument is that it won’t stay that way. We’ve seen mod tools similar to this make mistakes. Twitch, Tumblr, YouTube, Facebook, etc all have algorithm analysis for moderation purposes and all of them have messed up and require additional human review.

        • @starman2112@sh.itjust.works
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          24 months ago

          From their website:

          Is there a mechanism in place to prevent malicious/fake reports?

          Yes. While your overrides are immediately visible to you, changes are included in the publicly visible dataset only if they pass some trustworthiness criteria (including human validation).

          I see no reason to believe that the human review criteria is going anywhere