Content jacking and top posting other people’s content is really bad for Lemmy. It’s also just being a dick to other people making content on the platform.
- feed is spammy
- divides conversation
- chills engagement
- makes Lemmy less friendly to posters
This pattern is very common on lemmy, and needs to stop.
This is often used to attack or force migrate conversations from a instance someone doesn’t like to another instance they do like. It’s offensive by its very nature.
If you want to make a better community, great, do it but not at the expense of other Lemmy posters.
There are also posters who find it more sustainable when there is another poster around
From the space consolidation thread a couple months ago: https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/post/42022359/18010213
You could. As it would be obvious that in this context you don’t want to grow your community but just spam about the other one, there would probably get called out in a Meta thread in the community you dislike. People there would block your communities.
That goes against the fundamental notion that everyone can start a community. Who decides what communities should stay, and which one should not? At the moment, people vote with their participation, everybody makes their own choices. What alternative do you suggest?
Piefed isn’t only a frontend, it is a different platform.
The Lemmy devs recently stated that this is a client problem, and that they don’t plan to change that
https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/post/46984024/19528869
Long term, that will probably cost them, on top of the instance-wide bans regularly discussed.
Mbin has at similar approach where it is possible to see the number of comments on other communities:
https://fedia.io/m/[email protected]/t/2321464/New-Linux-Flaws-Enable-Full-Root-Access-via-PAM-and#comments
The more I discuss this topic, the more I think this is a shortcoming of Lemmy rather than an issue with the people crossposting content.
Isn’t this exactly what we are talking about? Trying to top post another community is stealing interaction, and a method of influencing which communities should not stay.
My stance is
What I understand your stance is (feel free to correct if I’m wrong)
At least not systematically, and not within a day of the original posting (so if something becomes topical)
It’s not a dibs system, so organic collisions where two people really want to talk about something is fine. just systematic reposting of EVERYTHING from people without their consent isn’t good for lemmy.
Not closed, the reposters should be be given opportunities to transition to their own content.
That is a direct aspect of the lemmy model, until such a time as themed communities becomes protocol level. The only way to not have to do this is kill any similar community before it grows.