As in, take over communities from inactive moderators? c/football’s sole moderator has not posted or commented in days, and several communities from Reddit are completely blank and owned by a certain “@AutoModerator” account which has never posted or commented. I was wondering, is that a possibility on Lemmy?

    • macracanthorhynchus@mander.xyz
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      1 year ago

      undefined> they can start another community.

      That’s the beauty of Lemmy: Don’t like a community? Make it again somewhere else. DO like a community? Make it again somewhere else anyway! Sub to duplicates of the communities you like: You’ll be reading comments by the same people across different instances, and a single mod issue or instance server crash can’t take you down!

    • Andreas@feddit.dk
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      1 year ago

      How is it less toxic and opportunistic for someone (such as that AutoModerator account) to claim and abandon all of the ideal community names while someone who wishes to actually run the community is unable to take it from them?

        • Andreas@feddit.dk
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          1 year ago

          Unlike domains, parking communities is free, so there is no consequence for creating a community and abandoning it. If I ran a bot that automatically claimed the names of the largest Reddit subs on your instance and then abandoned them, should your instance shut down those communities for good? Taking communities from moderators can be opportunistic, but that’s not a reason to close a community permanently because someone wanted to park the name or lost interest in running the community. Your problem with sniping would be solved if admins manually review the existing moderator and requester’s contribution history to the community before handing it over instead of relying on a hard time limit like “6 months of inactivity”. If the requester has no previous relationship to the community and seems to be a name sniper, their request is rejected.

          • so there is no consequence for creating a community and abandoning it

            You could also argue there’s almost no consequence to farming domain names as their cost is change money to many (I’m not up-to-date but a .com should be like $20 or less per year).

            If I ran a bot that automatically claimed the names of the largest Reddit subs on your instance

            That falls under spam, which is technically easy to block. Again, you are picking extreme examples. If you need them that means that your point was without merit from the start.

            would be solved if admins manually review

            The admins are volunteers. I don’t think you realize how unreasonable your demand is.

            I reiterate that the best and healthiest thing to do is instead of waiting for a community to show signs of inactivity to take their name away, that you instead move on and give up on that name. Be creative and find another name for your new community.