TL;DR: We tried to move the community because of moderatorial concerns, but
fumbled how we went about doing so. # First and Foremost: We’d like to formally
apologize for springing this on you all out of nowhere, and for taking so long
to respond to the backlash. With retrospect, we understand that we should have
notified you all beforehand to create an opportunity to give us feedback. We
understand that a lot of respect and trust was lost, and we expect it’ll take a
lot of work and a lot of time before we can earn it back, but we would be
grateful if y’all gave us that chance. # What happened, and why? The primary
issue that incited this was because we don’t fully agree with the admin’s
moderation policies. By and large they do a great job and align with us on mod
actions, but there have been several cases where we strongly disagreed, and our
choices were overruled. For example, 2 months ago, Kolanaki reached out to us
via email and said they were banned from 196 for “playing the victim” and asked
us why we banned him, but we didn’t. Moss talked to them and realized that the
ban was unjust after reviewing the comment he was banned for
[https://imgur.com/a/iRc607L]. If he had never contacted us, we wouldn’t have
known about the ban, and they would have still thought we banned them. There
were a few similar events in a short time frame, leading to a few posts/comments
in the community about the heavier modding policies. It’s possible some
posts/comments were misunderstood by Ada, or she interpreted things differently
than we would have, but it led to some bans that we felt were indeed
heavy-handed, and would not violate our rules in even the most uncharitable of
interpretations. We have found that this is an ongoing trend when it comes to
moderation of our community from the Admins. We oppose this because it leads to
many users who otherwise mean well ending up alienated and removed for reasons
that are frankly completely unfair. This is, in our opinion, counter to what we
set out to build in our community. It was made clear to us that it was their
instance, and that we didn’t have a say in who would be banned and what would be
removed. This is, of course, perfectly valid. It’s their instance, therefore
it’s up to them to decide what goes, but we no longer wanted to be the ones seen
as accountable for moderation actions we have no control over. For this reason,
we wanted to transfer out of lemmy.blahaj.zone. As much as we wanted to stay in
the LGBTQ instance, we couldn’t come to an agreement with Ada, so we talked to
her about transferring out and got her blessing. # How we messed up The most
major failing on our part is, of course, that we didn’t announce the migration
beforehand. Besides that, we also didn’t explain why we made the choices we made
and only gave very vague answers. We avoided sharing the justification for our
actions because we didn’t want to cause drama and/or exacerbate the situation,
but this lack of substantiating our actions only caused the situation to worsen.
Going forward (if we may), we won’t make the same mistakes again. From now on,
we will attempt to be as transparent as possible. # FAQ ## Why we chose
lemmy.world
Many people have been asking about why we moved to lemmy.world. It already hosts
the majority of large communities and besides this uncomfortable level of
centralization, it has also been somewhat controversial as of late. Despite
that, we still chose lemmy.world due to the following reasons: 1. Moss’s
communication with the admins, and their agreement to let us moderate the
community as we see fit. Ruud, after looking over our rules, agreed to abstain
from taking admin action to curate or otherwise moderate our community, unless
absolutely necessary.
2. The instance is large enough to support traffic without performance issues
(other instances like lemm.ee [http://lemm.ee], sh.itjust.works, and
lemmy.dbzer0.com [http://lemmy.dbzer0.com] would have been fine too), and the
instance has a certain degree of guaranteed longevity.
3. Moss was given a list that was kindly made by the lemmy.world people as a
part of our transfer detailing those who are banned on Blahaj.zone, but not on
Lemmy.world, making moderation discrepancies much easier to clean up
post-transfer.
4. Our agreement with Ruud predated the now-rescinded policy changes
5. It was, to the best of our knowledge, the most federated-with instance. We
have come to understand that this is not necessarily the case. ## Why not have
another team take over the original 196?
This is a similar situation with what happened over on Reddit. 196 mods didn’t
agree with admins and were eventually replaced (difference here is that we were
not forced out, but chose to leave). As Lemmy was a large gathering spot for
people fleeing Reddit, we felt it was better to try to keep the community
together and move together. Having another team take over splits the community.
The more fragmentation there is, the less longevity and volume of community each
skew will have.
## What about the possibility of more trolls, neoliberals, bad actors, sealions,
and transphobes on Lemmy.world?
Another huge issue was that the mods and the community were not on the same page
regarding lemmy.world, their admins, and their policies. We understand the
concern about trolls/bad-actors/transphobes, but we feel well-equipped to handle
these issues. In addition, we’ve been in contact with the lemmy.world admins for
a while now, and they’ve assured us that they’d allow us to moderate our
community however we saw fit. All this being said, we still failed to
communicate that to the community before taking action, which has undermined any
assurances that we have given after the fact. We cannot apologize enough for
that.
## What about the people who are using instances that are defederated from
lemmy.world (e.g. Beehaw)
This is an unfortunate issue that we were not aware of at the time of transfer.
We’re not sure what the solution is, but want to make our community as
accessible as possible. Community solutions are welcome.
# Did you migrate because of X? (addressing speculation) - We didn’t migrate due
to anything related to neopronouns
- We didn’t migrate due to us supposedly not wanting to use blahaj.zone lemmy
accounts
- We didn’t migrate due to us having friends who were banned from
lemmy.blahaj.zone
- We didn’t migrate due to us wanting to make the space less queer/leftist/etc
- We didn’t migrate due to us getting secretly ousted by the Blahaj admin team
# What now?
Well, we’re not sure. We could go back on our decision and stay on blahaj.zone,
continue on lemmy.world, do both, or try something else. Truth be told, we don’t
know what to do. For now, we will leave the comments open to civil community
discourse, and choose our course of action from there.
Sincerely, Qaz, Rmbp, Greembow, A_Very_big_Fan, Peachy, and Moss.
For the people that unfollowed or blocked 196, the mods have made a post there
Edit 2: 196 IS NOW (partly for now due to federation issues) UNLOCKED https://lemmy.world/post/24481114 but of course under the same moderators even tho many people r insisting that they shouldnt be trusted after all that happened, I’d personally keep using this alternative comm for now
That post cracked me up, with their no real apology or accountability but practically begging the community to come back to them, and talk of “fracturing” the fediverse lmfao, clearly made after and because they realised hardly anyone was following them to their new home, and not just because of what instance it’s on, but because they showed their asses as mods, and people don’t want to deal with their bullshit lol
I do hope the og 196 opens up again. If not at least we will have this. Thanks for opening this btw OP 👍
The stupidest part was that they said lemmy.dbzer0.com and lemm.ee would have been good choices too. Ok? why didn’t you choose those? why fucking .world of all places???
Tbh, speaking as a dbzer0 resident, if they dislike Ada they would fucking hate div0. I like it here, but he’s kinda been nuts for a while and I’ve been passively looking around at other instances just in case he goes off the deep end one day.