@LMAO is flooding the site with random communities because they’re salty about being banned for claiming too many community names. They claim they’re trying to “fuck your entire site up” but I imagine it’s a relatively quick fix to delete all the communities they’re creating, LMAO.

  • @boonhet@lemm.ee
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    3191 year ago

    Looking at his profile

    Since you banned my main for claiming community names, I’ll just fuck your entire site up instead. Much love, Angled

    Yeah can’t imagine why an instance admin might not want this insufferable piece of shit in their instance.

        • @PlasticExistence@lemmy.world
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          271 year ago

          Counterpoint: we don’t need growth if the cost is the destruction of a good thing. Guided growth is smarter and more sustainable especially when users like the subject of this post aren’t unique. There are a lot of small, mean-spirited people out there who will take a dump all over everything the moment they can.

        • Ataraxia
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          211 year ago

          Growth for the sake of growth is why reddit and everything else crashes and burns.

          • EuphoricPenguin
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            131 year ago

            Eeh, federated platforms add a lot more moving parts to the mix. Since there isn’t a single Lemmy that is all of Lemmy, people can always move to another instance if this one goes to shit.

          • @MaybeItWorks@sh.itjust.works
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            61 year ago

            There are always going to be assholes who abuse the system, always. I agree with the other poster that now is a good time to get communities up and running. People like LMAO have nothing but time to be internet douchebags and find ways around the system.

        • AFK BRB Chocolate
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          211 year ago

          True, but they could limit community creation to, say, five a day. That would be more than the vast majority of people would legitimately need.

          • @XiELEd@lemmy.fmhy.ml
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            1 year ago

            Unfortunately that would mean that real communities wouldn’t be created since that would be used up by someone creating spam communities. Though, maybe limiting the amount of communities that could be made by one account in a certain amount of time? What about verification by email (to send a coherent reason) to the admins to create a community.

            • AFK BRB Chocolate
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              61 year ago

              I was meaning five per day for a given user. That’s why I said that would be plenty for most individuals - most people aren’t legitimately going to want to create more than five communities in a day, and for them it wouldn’t be a hardship to wait a day for another five. But for people like this guy, trying to flood the instance with endless/pointless communities, it would cut that down to a manageable number.

              • @XiELEd@lemmy.fmhy.ml
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                21 year ago

                Oh 😅 I’m sorry for misunderstanding. 5 communities per day in a week is 35 communities, which I also thought was a lot. Where do we send our suggestions to the admins though?

        • @DogMuffins@discuss.tchncs.de
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          31 year ago

          Maybe, but what’s the alternative? Other trolls seeing this vulnerability and just letting it run?

          I would venture that these assholes just want maximum carnage. Requiring admin approval for a few days while a fix is pushed would mitigate that carnage.

          • @dragontamer@lemmy.world
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            41 year ago

            I mean, purging them likely isn’t taking that much admin time?

            One click, and bam, all their communities, usernames, etc. etc. are gone.

      • @XiELEd@lemmy.fmhy.ml
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        1 year ago

        Verifying community creation wouldn’t inconvenience users, though it will place a lot of work on the admins having to sift through spam. Limiting the amount of community creations would essentially mean that it will all be used up by spam communities, though.

    • @XiELEd@lemmy.fmhy.ml
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      61 year ago

      He got his fee-fees hurt because others didn’t like that he was trying to be a selfish asshole (shocking) so now he thinks it’s justice to destroy a site and affect multiple people who didn’t even do anything to him. 😂 jfc

  • Pope-King Joe
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    2871 year ago

    What a loser. I can’t imagine being this salty about this entire situation. Suck that tiny spez pig dick I guess.

      • @givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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        I’m betting it’s some bigot upset that this instance defederated from one they like and/or run.

        There’s one in particular that was pretty big and just got defederated from most major instances.

        They’re mad others don’t have to see their shit now

        • OctopusKurwa
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          261 year ago

          There’s a pretty big “dank” community that’s pretty much just racism that I’ve already blocked

          • @givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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            181 year ago

            Yeah, I feel like in addition to people choosing to leave reddit, a bunch of bigots who have been up banned from reddit are trying to come to Lemmy too.

            I’d like to see something where admins have to opt in to generating rather than the current arraignment where all it takes is one user following any community for it to happen.

          • 🇰 🔵 🇱 🇦 🇳 🇦 🇰 ℹ️
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            1 year ago

            I had a feeling that’s what the “dank” in “dank memes” meant back on Reddit when I couldn’t get a straight answer from the mods there about what made a dankmeme dank and not just a meme, as it didn’t have anything to do with moisture or weed. The memes themselves were mostly just reposted from regular memes; but the comments were flaming piles of shit covered tires.

  • Leraje
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    1571 year ago

    drop * from communities where creator == @lmao

    • Overzeetop
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      271 year ago

      And, we presume, ban the originating IP. This doesn’t seem like a sophisticated attack so it’s probably just a single account rather than an IP hopping VPN user. Sucks that Ruud has to play whack-a-mole (whack-a-lemming?) with this idiot.

  • @Netrunner@lemmy.world
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    1141 year ago

    I can imagine that in the next few days we’ll discover everything the devs didn’t think about prior to this. Part of the fun.

    • @steltek@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      Moderation on decentralized networks is way harder than otherwise, which was already a constant battle.

      I’m sure the devs thought of an attack but it gets deprioritized over fixing bugs and performance. I don’t think Lemmy was ready for Reddit’s collapse the way mastodon was with Twitter.

      • @jonne@infosec.pub
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        141 year ago

        Mastodon was far from ready for the first Twitter wave either. And there’s also the question of whether the fediverse model can actually handle this much traffic, there’s a lot of inefficient back and forth messaging between instances that’s essentially baked into the protocol, something that’s the opposite of what you need to do in a distributed system.

      • @winterayars@sh.itjust.works
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        31 year ago

        Hopefully we get the same community of moderation tools springing up that Reddit had. Bonus: they can actually be integrated into the base tooling this time!

    • Troy
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      231 year ago

      As General Patton famously said: no social media website survives contact with its trolls.

    • snooggums
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      31 year ago

      Also the things they thought of, but haven’t been a priority to address until it became a problem.

  • @CupDock@lemmy.world
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    1021 year ago

    @ruud@lemmy.world I’m sure you’re tremendously busy already, just want to make sure you’re aware of this.

    • @Randy_Bobandy@lemmy.ml
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      971 year ago

      I actually like this idea. The prevention of supermods like AwkwardtheTurtle is absolutely something that should be considered.

      • Margot Robbie
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        1 year ago

        When people previously discussed this on Lemmy, the concern would be that bad actors would create multiple accounts to get around that rule.

        But again, the lock on a door doesn’t guarantee your house won’t get broken into, it only has to deter them with extra effort/risk that they will be less likely to do it.

        I honestly can’t imagine modding more than 2 communities at once. Do these people not have real lives?

        • AnonStoleMyPants
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          171 year ago

          Yeah it’s kinda problematic. The people who need to mod everything (super mod weirdos) would just make a bunch of accounts to ge around it. However, the people who just happen to be asked to mod a fourth community would basically have to say can’t do sorry mate.

          Though I guess you could just have the number be high, like 10, which would probably lot be an issue for normal folks even if they mod a lot.

          • @JasonDJ@vlemmy.net
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            1 year ago

            Easily enough fixed.

            Initial mod limit of 3. Can mod an additional community 30 days after added to the mod roster for another, upto a hard cap. Maybe the delay increases exponentially.

            • @wason@lemmy.world
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              31 year ago

              Initial mod limit of 3

              Do you mean like having just 3 accounts to moderate a community? Because it was normal for people to create an alt account and set it as a mod too? I was thinking like setting some limits based on community activity in a period of time like, if your community gets 10 posts per week 3 people should be enough right? But if your community gets 100 posts a week maybe consider adding another 2 mods. So, limit the ammount of mods per community to 3 by default and have some sort of automated message where if you pass certain threshold like 100 posts in a week you can request the instance admins to increase the number of mods.

              • @JasonDJ@vlemmy.net
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                31 year ago

                I mean to say the maximum amount of communities a user can moderate.

                Give a low limit to start, then gradually increase the number of communities that a user can mod.

                If I understand things correctly (as I and so many others here are new to lemmy), this all comes down to the discretion of the instance admin anyway. I think we’re all just contemplating “default” rules.

          • Margot Robbie
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            41 year ago

            Of course, like I said, it doesn’t need to keep out everyone, just preventing the lowest effort trolls would make life a lot easier for the mods/admins.

            Don’t let perfection stand in the way of progress.

        • @Photographer@lemmy.world
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          31 year ago

          If you want to mod 200 subs but you’re limited to 5-10 per account it is much much harder than being able to do it on a single account

    • @dragontamer@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Bad idea.

      I’m making a bunch of communities myself, but mostly to see which communities stick or don’t stick. 3 is too low a number. Like ~10 or ~20 is probably reasonable.

      Not that I plan to truly own 20 communities. But I probably need to create 20 communities just to find 2 good communities with enough followers.


      That being said, power-modders probably need to be automatically culled. There are a bunch of people coming in, not making a single post at all and then creating 30, 40, 50+ communities. You can tell if someone is truly dedicated because they’ll make at least 2 or 3 posts as a “welcome” post, or non-default sidebars (etc. etc.).

        • @dragontamer@lemmy.world
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          141 year ago

          I dunno, honey-potting is a better idea IMO.

          Let them make a billion communities. Makes it easier to catch-and-purge later. You’d rather have these accounts waste a whole bunch of their own time that can be automatically detected and dealt with.

          • @ExtraMedicated@lemmy.world
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            31 year ago

            They could probably just write a script to generate countless communities in no time. I think there should be some sort of validation.

      • @Methylman@lemmy.world
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        41 year ago

        Why does one need several “test” which communities stick at the same time? Imo, surely a month to test three-five communities is exactly the kind of usage you would be looking for whereas opening more than that just splits the user base and defeats the purpose of testing (not to mention the potential ill-effects on the instance owners as are described in this thread)

        • @dragontamer@lemmy.world
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          11 year ago

          I have a lot more than just 3 interests, and many more than a few ways of making a community-name for those interests.

    • @SSUPII@sopuli.xyz
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      21 year ago

      There are many communities of my interest that didn’t exist. So in my case having only 3 would really cripple me

  • @Rhoeri@lemmy.world
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    921 year ago

    So, it seems a few childish knobs came in with the refugees. Had to know it would happen.

    • db2
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      511 year ago

      They’re not getting their jollies harassing people at reddit anymore. Remember, to them any attention is good attention. Employ child psychology because that’s where their mind is stuck.

      • Meldroc
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        311 year ago

        Yep. Same reason why they won’t just hang out at places like 4chan, Truth Social, etc.

        The libruls they want to “own” are here. They’re leaving Reddit because Reddit’s going to become a Nazi bar, seeing that half the mods left, and the other have had their tools nerfed. When the libs are gone, they get bored.

        • @kescusay@lemmy.world
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          61 year ago

          Mod of a city subreddit, here. That’s basically my fear. I love that community, but it’s become impossible to mod, and I have no doubt the absolutely worst people on the internet are going to be the majority of redditors eventually.

        • Omega
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          51 year ago

          I did not want to think about that today. Yet here we are.

  • @Pillarist@lemmy.world
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    751 year ago

    How don’t these fuckwits realize this place doesn’t want them? Stay over in the trash heap where you belong.

    • @Iceman@lemmy.world
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      131 year ago

      It’s probably pure trolling just like the old internet. People are riled up over reddit and stoking the flames a classic recipe for pure lulz

  • @TeaHands@lemmy.world
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    731 year ago

    Truly, having some spam text in a box in the corner of the homepage “fucks the entire site up”. Truly.

  • WideEyedStupid
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    1 year ago

    The most annoying thing is that the “Trending Communities” section is filled with spam right now.

    I think this does show an inherent current flaw with Lemmy. We need a way to report users through their profile. So far we can only report users when they comment, but this guy isn’t commenting anywhere so there’s no report button. Unless I’m missing something. :p

    • @StarManta@lemmy.world
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      831 year ago

      That’s not an “inherent flaw”. It’s a flaw that currently exists in Lemmy, but one that could be easily remedied with a patch that adds a “report” link to the profile. An inherent flaw would be one that is difficult or impossible to mitigate due to the concept of Lemmy.

    • HorseFD
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      261 year ago

      Also “trending communities” shouldn’t be the same thing as “new communities”.

    • @inverimus@lemm.ee
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      121 year ago

      There is already a proposal on github to hard limit and/or rate limit the creation of communities.

  • SpaceBar
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    521 year ago

    These kinds of annoyances are actually good in the long run. Idiots like this guy are helping stress test the platform and lemmy will be better for it.

    Improve the servers now before things get even busier the next time reddit pisses People off.

    • @lol@lemm.ee
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      141 year ago

      I feel like the little “write why” box that some instances have for account creation would be well fit for this. But for creating communities, or atleast for big instances to keep them from having tons of ghost communities.

      • @jonne@infosec.pub
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        61 year ago

        If you’re explicitly spamming, you’d just put garbage in the ‘why’ box as well.

        • Troy
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          61 year ago

          Right. Effectively you DOS the site admins this way, making it hard for actual community set up.

          But if you combine it with rate limiting, email verification, and a captcha, maybe it can be slowed to a manageable crawl.