this post was submitted on 27 Jun 2023
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First of all, thanks for engaging in a thoughtful way. I'm going to try to respond to all your questions, apologies if I inadvertently group a few.
Depends on the context. Often an individually community determines what falls into that category for them, but for example the UN defines it as "offensive discourse targeting a group or an individual based on inherent characteristics (such as race, religion or gender) and that may threaten social peace." source
It's definitely not always handled for individuals by authorities. In case of private individuals (e.g. lemmy instance owners), they may simply not want to pay for / engage with that content. In case of public individuals (e.g. elected representatives), they have a duty to act on behalf of their constituents to enact protections to allow everyone to safely exist in society.
That probably represents some cases, but it is not the responsibility of impacted communities to deprogram hateful people. People change because of real relationships, built over real shared values, not over shitposting on the internet.
"Can lead to a better social ecosystem" is doing a LOT of heavy lifting here. I think for the majority of people, the infinitesimal chance of maybe having a positive change is far outweighed by the negative consequenses of allowing unfettered harassment and abuse.
Admins should focus on whatever they want, they are the ones managing the space. The inconvenience to you is having to visit another website, the inconvenience to users targeted by this harassement is a lot more than that.
People make choices. If you find yourself on the wrong side, time to switch sides. If you don't, then maybe you don't actually believe you're on the wrong side.
A lot of people rely on their internet communities to be safe for exactly that reason. Can't put up a pride flag on your apartment because last time you got a brick through your window? At least you can be safe to be yourself in the online communities you chose. Nobody is stopping folks from interacting with online communities, you just have to agree to follow the community rules.
Ironically defederation is the biggest boon we've been given. No longer subject to "engagement" based algorithms, communities are free to decide what they want to engage with. Defederation is not hate.
Spend any time on IRL social networks (e.g. LinkedIn, Facebook, Instagram, etc), and you'll see that people don't give a shit even when presented with real names and faces.
Devil's advocacy is only useful when used to strengthen arguments, otherwise it's just an excuse for people to hold a position without taking responsibility for it.
Everyone is free to say what they want, however, they are not free from the consequences. This is true of all interactions, IRL or online. People vomiting out every thought in their head instead of carefully considering is part of what leads to so much conflict.
Controversial discussions can happen wherever people want to support them, and under the rules they set.
The conflict is already there IRL. It is the responsibility of the individual to learn and grow, not for communities to proselytize.
Hateful people self isolate by choice, only interacting to attack those communities. Queer people are not welcome in their churches, bars, neighborhoods, social circles, etc.
If you look at any of the truely "open" communities, they are essentially cesspools of hate and violence. Yeah people can clean dog shit off their own lawns, but much better if the shit wasn't there in the first place.
Disagree. You even disagree with yourself in your own definition. What is the responsibility of an individual who looks after themselves, their friends, and their communities? Maybe taking action to protect those friends and communities, instead of forcing them to protect themselves?
The internet is people, it's not some mystical new social order. I want the fuckheads to stay away from me, just like IRL.