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Social Forum federato con il resto del mondo. Non contano le istanze, contano le persone
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    In the Fediverse track at SFSCon, Jaz-Michael King spoke about:Hiraeth and Hashtags: Building a Bilingual Community on the Fediversehttps://fediforum.org/2025-11-sfscon/#fediforum #sfscon #fediverse #socialweb #iftas #tootwales
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    I'm sad to see IFTAS Connect shutting down. #IFTAS offered a community platform for server admins and moderators, committed to keeping the #fediverse safe.Thanks everyone at @iftas for your hard work. đź«¶https://about.iftas.org/2025/09/29/sunsetting-iftas-connect/
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    Running a community in the Fediverse means balancing openness with safety. Every year, @iftas takes the pulse of administrators, moderators, and community managers with their Annual Needs Assessment. This survey helps identify what’s working, where support is needed, and which tools can make a difference for those keeping decentralized spaces safe.The 2025 survey is now openTake part in the IFTAS Needs Assessment (5–10 minutes).Take the survey now(If you haven’t seen them before, you can also take a look at last year’s report)Last year’s responses represented moderators of over 4.3 million accounts across ActivityPub platforms. With WordPress now the largest group of federating instances, it’s especially important for our community of hosts, site admins, and moderators to be heard.Moderation in WordPress: From Site-Wide to Personal ControlsWe recently introduced a major update to the ActivityPub plugin for WordPress: personalized and site-wide moderation tools.Site administrators can now set domain, keyword, and actor-level blocks that protect the entire site.Individual users can fine-tune their own experience with personal blocks, managed directly from their profiles.Content is checked against both global and personal rules—so moderation works at every level.These improvements directly address needs raised in previous IFTAS surveys, making moderation more discoverable, flexible, and effective for WordPress communities in the Fediverse.Your Input MattersIFTAS uses the Needs Assessment to guide tools, policies, and advocacy that reflect the real-world challenges of moderators—especially those in under-resourced communities. The more representative the responses, the stronger the outcomes for everyone.If you’re running a federating WordPress site, please consider:Filling out the survey yourself.Sharing it with other admins, moderators, and community organizers.Reminding folks that it’s anonymous, quick, and impactful.Take the 2025 Fediverse Needs AssessmentTogether, we can keep building a safer, healthier Fediverse—one that reflects the needs of its communities.

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  • @stefan @cheeaun unfortunately I don't have any information on that (and we don't track specifics so it would be difficult to comment I think; will ask some folks about it though)

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  • @stefan as for the linked post of Alice: yes, our instance was spammed by botnet, creating sever accounts spreading pro-russian propaganda (mostly, sometimes chaotically randomly interacting, for some time. I even had some chat with botnet operator (or maybe it was AI, but I doubt it). The demanded to cancel local pro-ukrainian account: it is not operated by me, and it is very polite, not even any gore videos or so, and it is anyway just mirror from Facebook (they like my local 2000 characters limit).

    So I know, how this feels, kinda.

    The "reply-guy" issue is completely different. We just tend to reply to certain topics. Sometimes we do it, because we consider it funny. Most of the replies are not intentionally hateful, but they may represent point of view alien to original post.

    The LGBTQ topic is ... complicated, somehow. I actually started taking this seriously only after I saw Putin's propaganda machine targeting them as an example of "western decadence". Then I realized, that of course, that something is terribly wrong there and I saw the source of hate speech aligned with other types of propaganda, eg. climate change deniers.

    While creating safe space for vulnerable minorities is important, I also seek kinda normal, non-safe, adult space: but just not controlled by corporations. So while I understand the need to leave eg. Xitter because of hate speech, and I don't want it there: I also want to do most of the stuff me and other people did on Xitter, we just don't want to be owned by the new owner.

    And I am really not a minority of any kind (maybe just slightly neurodivergent, but probably rather typical). I just wanted to be somewhere else. I spent some effort to run the place and help to promote it. But my vision is not "minorities only", "safe space only". Of course: no nazi bar. But I am federalist, not intersectionalist.

    Most people just seek interaction (with live people, no bots, no AI) and can withstand some amount of interaction...

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  • @stefan this is... complicated.

    First of all.. if you are advocating FOSS against Microsoft or Apple ecosystems, you are actually advocating marginalized thing too.

    We have this debate inside Czech Pirate Party (which BTW is very vocal, when it comes to rights of marginalized groups). They completely removed the entire "public money, public code" discourse from the party program, even the long term program. Because "voters won't understand". So it is minority, marginalized topic. But with tremendous consequences. Entire "big-tech" problem would not exist, if we did this right...

    I agree some people don't think twice before replying something, and sometimes, they are not even target group of the original post.

    But some people may feel, like "vile attack" is something completely unrelated to any social group, to which the original author belongs. But the engagement may be not always the right thing. But if someone wants "write-only" media, who is expected to read the messages, then? The promise of possible interaction is what people makes to move from TV to social media, I thing...

    I would mind some warning like "you are not replying to person, which is not following you. Are you sure you want to proceed?". This would be gentle reminder, that maybe the person is not really interested in my opinion, which is of course ok.

    Disabling comments under status is technically hard to implement, but it is close to disabling quoting, which was already implemented. Also, comments could be easily restricted to people followed by author...

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  • @xChaos The challenge here is that we all use social media for different things, and our experience is also different, regardless of our intention.

    As a (relatively) well-adjusted straight white dude, I never have to think too hard when I want to post something.

    Nobody is going to jump into my mentions and attack or question any aspect of my identity. I hardly ever deal with mansplaining.

    Marginalized people can easily attract vile attacks by just existing. And they need tools to defend themselves until moderators have a chance to step in and review the situation.

    This metaphor illustrates something a bit different, but worth a read in this context as well.

    https://lgbtqia.space/@alice/115499829288185416

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  • @stefan that is a good point - it just might work Stefan, it just might work.

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  • @CCirco Maybe if you ask enough questions, enough of them get tired out!

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