this post was submitted on 20 Mar 2026
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I came here a few weeks ago after many years of reddit. Altogether I find discussions I enjoy, however, the posts and comments noticeably lean, well, tankie (I didn’t know that term before I came here). It’s not that I am looking for an echo chamber, but I also don’t want to spend my time reading propaganda. I’m really curious about a lot of things outside politics, as well as the opinions and arguments of reasonable people across the political spectrum, but I don’t want to listen to the boring canned lies of fascists and tankies. I realized that people celebrating communist dictators trigger me, and this is something I didn’t have to deal with before I started reading lemmy, I didn’t even know this type existed.
I also notice that accounts created just a few hours in advance come from other instances to brigade political posts. Because of how lemmy works, I can block individual users or communities, but not individual instances. Is there an instance that could be a “safe space” from this kind of brigading and tankie spam? Or a way to use the internet to read interesting things now that blogs died and then Reddit became whatever it became?

Edit: Thanks everyone for the helpful and wholesome comments. Of course, some trolls/wackos showed up as well to say hi.

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[–] porcoesphino@mander.xyz 4 points 5 days ago (1 children)

It might be worth adding that there is some backlash on BlueSky for their shared blocklists recently because they can accidentally catch reasonable people or be militarised to deliberately grab extra people. Or at least that's my take. Personally I now consider a lot of social media along the lines of "if I might not feel comfortable with you around the wife and kids, then a block is reasonable like not inviting you to the next dinner party" and that having a block that you can click through removes a lot of these issues (collapsed post /comment with no title unless you click type thing)

[–] tal@lemmy.today 1 points 3 days ago (1 children)

Yeah, that's why I mentioned votes


I think that it'd make sense to be able to maybe do something like build a score aggregated from multiple lists or something.

Another thing I've mentioned in the past is using this as a mechanism for tagging. The NSFW flag was a hack that Reddit put in because some people wanted to browse Reddit at work and some people wanted to post stuff that wouldn't be considered acceptable in most work contexts. There are many, many different categories that someone might want to "tag" things on. Some people are fine with nudity. Some people are fine with gore. Some people are fine with suggestive content. Some people object to specific items in the above. I think that it will never be the case that everyone will manually tag their own content in all the same areas, but it could be the case that someone could create "lists" that one could subscribe to that could permit that sort of tagging; same mechanism.

[–] porcoesphino@mander.xyz 2 points 2 days ago

Yeah, tags/labels are useful but do run into:

  • scaling issues

    • you can end up with an overwhelming amount of tags
    • if moderator adds tags then the post quantity can be overwhelming
  • abuse

    • if poster side then not adding the tag
    • if viewer side then adding it when the poster disagrees
  • disagreements

    • what constitutes a given label - so most moderation arguments

Still, agreed they're a useful addition