A few examples include s*x questions on askreddit, “this” comments, nolife powermods, jokes being more frequent than actual answers

  • This is about the moderator class justifying their power to set the bounds of allowed discourse. Empowering the users with the means of decide their own curation algorithm settings would disempower moderators. And since the moderators can speak louder than users, they have more influence on the design direction.of Lemmy.

    In a properly decentralized system, the default view would be everything and you would apply your preferred filters on top.

    Communities themselves wouldn’t be moderated, users would decide their own moderation actions publicly and other users would subscribe to moderation action feeds of people they agree with. Or maybe our own content curation algorithms would determine the moderation consensus of the whole userbase and take action on the client side using that to decide what to display.

    Current Lemmy falls way way short of any of those features.

    • The difference with lemmy is that you are more than welcome to set up your own instance to become a moderator or a part of the “moderator class” as you call it. There’s literally nothing stopping you from doing that if you have an issue with the “bounds of allowed discourse”. Then you would have your default view be everything as you could select federation with every other instance as you claim would be the ideal “properly decentralized system”.