For all your boycotting needs. I’m sure there’s some mods caught in lemmy.ml
[http://lemmy.ml]’s top 10 that are perfectly upstanding and reasonable people,
my condolences for the cross-fire. 1.
[email protected] [/c/
[email protected]]
and
[email protected] [/c/
[email protected]]. Or of course communities that rule.
2.
[email protected] [/c/
[email protected]] 3.
[email protected]
[/c/
[email protected]]. Quite small, plenty of more specific ones available.
Also linux is inescapable on lemmy anyway :) 4.
[email protected] [/c/
[email protected]] 5.
[email protected] [/c/
[email protected]] 6.
[email protected]
[/c/
[email protected]] and maybe
[email protected]
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[email protected]], lemmy.one itself seems to be up in the air.
[email protected] [/c/
[email protected]] says
[https://reddthat.com/comment/11037523]
[email protected] [/c/
[email protected]].
They really seem to be hiding even from another, those tinfoil hats :) 7.
[email protected] [/c/
[email protected]] 8. Seems like
[email protected] [/c/
[email protected]] and
[email protected] [/c/
[email protected]], various smaller
comic-specifc communities as well as
[email protected]
[/c/
[email protected]] 9.
[email protected]
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[email protected]] 10.
[email protected]
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[email protected]] (Out of the loop? Here’s a thread on lemmy.ml mods and
their questionable behaviour [https://lemmy.world/post/16211417])
If somebody posts something illegal (like CSAM), you don’t want to simply deactivate it and leave it available for ‘review’ in the mod log. You need the ability to ensure it is not only hidden, but completely and totally deleted in memory, on the disk, in the database, on any caches / CDNs, etc.
Oh okay. And then do you write a report to the government or something? Sorry I haven’t modded a forum since I was like 9
Requirement to do so depends on two different factors: Hosting country and site owner country, both of which claim jurisdiction.