The !android@lemmy.world community on this instance thrived for a while and reached almost 19k subscribers very rapidly and it was very active.

Recently the Reddit mods of r/Android created another community with a few hundred members on another different instance where they are mods and that one was then astroturfed on c/android by a person seemingly unrelated to that community’s mods.

Apparently some discussions then took place between owners of both communities and the mods of !android@lemmy.world community then unilaterally closed the community, thus, according to their own sticky notice, succumbing to the flawed reasoning that the Reddit mods are “more experienced” and therefore the rightful representatives of an Android community.

I find this behavior sad and it just shouldn’t be allowed here for two reasons:

  • this sets the precedent for more Reddit mods to just come and claim “ownership” of communities by bullying existing ones into closing;
  • does not respect the almost 19k subscribers who didn’t even have a say in this, and especially those who had already expressed that they joined !android@lemmy.world because they did NOT want to be moderated by the old Reddit mods.

!android@lemmy.world needs to be reopened now and the mods removed since they expressed that they no longer want to moderate a community on lemmy.world.

  • Aftermath6187@vlemmy.net
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    1 year ago

    Seems like everyone wants a bunch of arbitrary rules today. I think all this upheaval is normal for a rapidly growing decentralized network. Having a rule that no one in the fediverse can do something is going to be unenforceable.

    • Sean@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Having a rule that no one in the fediverse can do something is going to be unenforceable.

      That’s a really good point.

      • Mitchacho74@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Isn’t the whole point of Lemmy and the way communities work is if you want to moderate and don’t like the way the existing one does it, then create your own? Like I get your point here but basically it sounds like the ones in charge of it said “oh we don’t want to do this anymore”. If they opened it and started it off, it sucks it’s closed but a new one can always be reopened.

        Unless you’re looking to NOT do it that way, and have the admins help find new mods for any large community that decides to do something similar

      • ashok36@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        the Reddit mods made them believe that they’re the rightful representatives of r/Android.

        I mean, they are the rightful reps of r/Android. The questions is whether or not that means anything on Lemmy. My opinion is that it doesn’t.

    • yarn@sopuli.xyz
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      It’s the admin’s house rules. They’re the ones running the server. !android@lemmy.world is only locked right now, so the admin can appoint a new mod team and unlock it again, if they want.

      OP was only asking for a rule in lemmy.world, not all of lemmy.

  • Madbrad200@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    personally I find the whole “duplicate” community thing a bit of a problem. New forums already struggle to maintain activity and this just compounds it by fragmenting them even further.

    • BURN@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Same. Discoverability is awful across the platform. The fact that there’s multiple communities per topic with (what appears to be) the same names means a lot of confusion.

      I’m still not sold on the fediverse because of this. Centralization is not evil, and the lack of it does hurt the platform imo.

    • wildn0x@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      It will get better when people get past the idea of a subreddit needing to exist on lemmy. I’m looking forward to more of the official creator type communities popping up. Those will be more “official” unlike android where anyone can make one and it doesn’t matter much.

  • Vamp@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I made a post asking about this too because it seemed a bit insanely barbaric to punish the active users who don’t want to just move to another instance and solely want to use world.

    " “we’re keen to avoid unnecessary fragmentation for existing members and confusion for any newcomers.”

    ah yes because locking the entire community without anyone’s knowledge and consent first isn’t totally insane and like another certain platform we all left from."

    Said post was also brigaded heavily so I deleted it since I got a lot of insanely nasty messages and snarky replies.

    Honestly this just seems like people want another repeat of awkwardtheturtle I’m Gonna be real lmao

    • Mitchacho74@lemmy.world
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      You can still access the other community on a different instance from world, you don’t need a different login or anything

    • lchapman@programming.dev
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      1 year ago

      Why do so many repeat this falsehood? There is no concept of “moving to a new instance” for a user. This is not like old phpBB forums. Your account works everywhere.

    • sloonark@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      The reason you were downvoted on your other post wasn’t because it was being “brigaded”. It was because you kept talking like they were trying to force you to move your account over to another instance, when that clearly isn’t the case. It would take a matter of seconds to subscribe to the other android community. One click.

  • Sean@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I don’t think that’s fair at all. Lemmy is still in it’s infancy and completely autonomous from Reddit and it’s mods. If they want an Android sublemmy on a different instance, then that is their right and their prerogative, but they have ZERO authority to step into an already thriving community and try to take it over or shut it down.

    I’m trying to get an AskLemmy clone off the ground right now, and if an AskReddit mod stepped in and told me to close down, I’d politely tell them to stick where the sun doesn’t shine.

    • Aftermath6187@vlemmy.net
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      That’s totally your right, just like it was for the lemmy.world mods. They made a choice, they weren’t forced into anything as far as anyone knows.

        • iAmTheTot@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          but not close it down

          Pretty sure they do. Make your own community if you want to run it your way.

          • AlmightySnoo 🐢🇮🇱🇺🇦@lemmy.worldOP
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            No they don’t, that’s essentially the same as parking community names since they’re depriving lemmy.world of the c/android community name and parking communities is not allowed at least here.

            • Mitchacho74@lemmy.world
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              The thing is, each instance isn’t supposed to have their own of each community, like the goal is to have communities spread all over the fediverse. Lemmy.world not having a c/android isn’t a bad thing, because you can always connect to any other one.

              The parking community name is a good point if it is against the rules but I feel like that rule is just designed to do exactly what you’re looking for, having a version of each community on lemmy.world, defeating the whole point of the fediverse.

              Lemmy really needs to figure out a way to group many smaller instances of the same topic into one, like a multi-reddit feature. That way people can subscribe to a topic and it will combine all posts from the smaller android communities without having to create more and continue fragmenting it

        • BradleyUffner@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          If the mods don’t have a right to close their own community, who does? The very presence of a button available to mods to lock it down suggests that they DO have the right to lock it.

        • Sean@lemmy.world
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          Exactly. That’s 19K people who are now shit out of luck unless they want to make a brand new account on a different server and start the whole process of building cred over again.

      • Sean@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Okay, I’m sorry, I may have misinterpreted your post a bit because I read too fast. So what you’re saying it they basically buckled like a belt to the r/android mods without showing an ounce of backbone?

        They should have stood up for themselves and kept their space open. Did the r/android mods at least give them any kind of authority or say over the new space being as they already put it in all that work?

        • Mitchacho74@lemmy.world
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          Yeah they’re saying they just gave it up. The thing is, I get wanting to be different from reddit, but over half of our users came from reddit, I miss using it at times, and many moved over solely to stick it to spez but don’t have any fundamental problems with how reddit is setup. Obviously Lemmy improves on it in ways, but Lemmy can 100% use reddit as influence to grow.

          If r/android is trying to move to Lemmy, most of this didn’t really exist until people moved from reddit, yeah they should have moved eariler, but to me, c/android should be the spiritual successor to r/android, and while I’m ok with different mods, if the original subreddit just up and moved 1 to 1 to Lemmy, I wouldn’t be upset, I probably would have done the exact same thing and gave the community to them, because they helped grow that community on Reddit and seemingly are willing to do it here too.

          Basically ideas and pepper from reddit aren’t bad solely because they came from reddit, not ALL outsiders are our enemies.

  • Mike@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Now, hold on champ. There’s a couple of points here you’ve conveniently ignored or tweaked to suit your position.

    Firstly, I’m not aware of any charter that says I’m obligated in any form to offer the community a say in the decision. Should I have? Morally, there’s obviously an argument for yes. But did I have to, no. The choice was mine, and I made one. It’s your bad luck that I started the community, I suppose.

    Secondly, there was no bullying, soft or otherwise. What I said in the pinned post is what I meant: I want us all to come together in one community, and I’m excited by that community being on an instance that is dedicated specifically to tech communities. I’m excited by the idea of the admin of that community being focused on tech communities, and being actively engaged and available to address the needs of that tech community – rather than waiting on the busy admins of an increasingly massive instance.

    As for the rest of it, you can debate it all you like. I had a very eloquent and levelheaded message from @ElectroVagrant@lemmy.world today that I’m in the process of replying to. I don’t think they’ll like my position, but I’m certainly thankful they came to me, politely and respectfully, rather than lobbing a misguided and factually flawed post into the community.

    But hey man, cheers for playing.

    • AlmightySnoo 🐢🇮🇱🇺🇦@lemmy.worldOP
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      I’m not aware of any charter that says I’m obligated in any form to offer the community a say in the decision.

      This alone should disqualify you from having any claim on c/android. That’s incredibly shitty and disrespectful to the 19k users just because you wanted to move. You didn’t make the community alone, the 19k, of which you were part indeed, did. You should be ashamed to write that and you owe everyone an apology.

  • theDoctor@lemmy.sdf.org
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    1 year ago

    Nothing says that the !android@lemmy.world will be locked forever. They wrote a well thought out post, pinned it, and encouraged people to move to their new home. No one was strong armed. No one needs to go make new accounts. Everyone needs to take a breath.

    Would you rather they had deleted the community and said nothing? Everyone is up and arms over something that was created DAYS ago.

    • Leeks@kbin.social
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      It sets a dangerous precedent. What’s to stop someone from creating a community, then go to every other instance they can find and register on, create a community with the same name, lock it, and direct everyone to the instance they want?

      Any community that sees no activity (comments, votes, post, etc) over a reasonable time period (90 days?) should be automatically deleted or all the mods are removed allowing for others to come in and take over the name space.

      • AnonTwo@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        But that’s not what happened. This wasn’t a community made with the intention of directing people to a bigger one. It was an already existing one that wanted to merge with people it did not disagree with.

        You’re adding an additional bit (making communities that don’t yet exist to redirect) to make it sound worse than it is. Merges have happened in communities long before this…

      • theDoctor@lemmy.sdf.org
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        1 year ago

        I have no issues with the 90 days in general. I just think this one instance is getting blown out of proportion. The post that was written made sense as to why they wanted to relocate. It didn’t seem like a powertrip or of malicious intent. And honestly, it would be a far worse experience to delete the community with essentially no explanation.

        Now if they decide to hoarde it forever, sure, thats a different story. And trying to redirect every possible community to a single is another issue entirely.

        But I think in this case what the mods did makes perfect sense and in general a principle of ‘if no activity from mods in X time then Y’ also makes sense. Everyone is just a bit jumpy right now.

  • TheSpookiestUser@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I’m not sure if your read of the situation is correct.

    I think it’s more that the mods involved do not want to fracture the Android community on purpose - even though this is explicitly allowed and encouraged by the structure of Lemmy and the Fediverse in general, it’s not great when trying to get a community off the ground.

    If the mods on lemmy.world were strongarmed or pressured into doing this, that is wrong and I think the situation should be resolved as you say. If they weren’t bullied but just talked it out and came to this conclusion, I think it’s fine.

    • Vamp@lemmy.world
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      "i think it’s more that the mods involved do not want to fracture the Android community on purpose - "

      them splitting off into another community totally isn’t going to fracture the community and cause others to make a bunch of other communities. That’s a poor argument.

      • TheSpookiestUser@lemmy.world
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        Strictly speaking it would be more fracturing to have two communities actively existing than to have a redirect.

        On reflection of the whole situation, I think it would be fine for the android community here to be taken over by someone else if someone really wants to. The thing I actually take issue with is OP’s framing of the situation as inherently hostile. It reminds me of the parts of Reddit I’d rather be left behind, the instant escalation of every problem to an extreme no matter how slight.

        • Slowy@lemmy.world
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          Not sure why they couldn’t have just asked the userbase their thoughts, or just had the ex Reddit mods join the significantly larger community entrenched community as part of the mod team. It may well be the original android mods just didn’t feel like holding up the responsibility anymore, it certainly doesn’t need to be some hostile takeover conspiracy, but there are also some way better ways to go about it for sure

          • TheSpookiestUser@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            I don’t know either. But I am not going to immediately jump to the extreme conclusion of bullying or blackmail. If that turns out to be true, I’ll gladly eat my words, but can we not start from a more reasonable position and just message the guys involved first?

    • MxM111@kbin.social
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      Well, one problem is that I can’t access the new server from kbin, because for whatever reason they are not federated with kbin.

      • TheSpookiestUser@lemmy.world
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        Then you should reach out to the mods both here and on that instance pointing this out.

        Did anyone even try asking the c/android mods on this instance about this, or was an inflammatory post immediately resorted to first?

        • MxM111@kbin.social
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          This instance is closed and that instance is inaccessible. The only way for me to reach is to make new account, which I do not want to do for various reasons.

  • Lvxferre@lemmy.ml
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    I think that you guys could/should gather a bunch of users of the relevant comm, that are willing to become mods. And then request the comm to the admins of the relevant instance, explaining what’s going on. Because there’s no problem whatsoever with having multiple overlapping comms, on the contrary (competition is good).

    I do not think however that this sets any precedent for more Reddit mods to claim ownership of the local comms. They were only able to do it in this case because the current mods explicitly allowed them to do it.

      • Lvxferre@lemmy.ml
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        Okay, better course of action then: contact the admins in c/support and explain what’s going on, from the users’ PoV. In the meantime, try to gather a few potential new mods for the comm elsewhere, perhaps even in this thread.

        Three things can happen:

        • the admins say “okay, but who’s going to mod it now?” Then you give them the names of the people willing to mod it.
        • the admins say “no” and give you some reasoning. Then the course of action depends on what they say, really.
        • the admins give you crickets, Reddit style. Then you’re probably better off recreating the community in another instance.
        • yarn@sopuli.xyz
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          Admins are taking a test right now they didn’t realize they signed up for

          • Lvxferre@lemmy.ml
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            If there’s one thing that my times as forum moderator taught me, it’s that you sign up for “the test” once you step onto a position of power. All mods, all admins, all community managers, everyone with power over other users can - and should - be tested by those other users. No way to run, no way to hide.

      • Pika@lemmy.world
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        I agree with this mindset. If they chose to leave they should delete or replace the community. it shouldn’t be locked status, it’s against what I’ve found the mindset of lemmy is.

    • Sean@lemmy.world
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      Unless I’m mistaken, I believe even Reddit has/had a policy that allowed users to take over abandoned/locked/banned subs as long as the new owners took it in a productive direction.

      • Lvxferre@lemmy.ml
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        Not only Reddit has it, but it has been using and abusing that policy, in order to shut up protesters, by pretending that they “don’t want to mod”.

        Even then, it’s that sort of policy that all instances need.

        • Sean@lemmy.world
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          It’s not the worst idea for instance admins to consider, maybe just with better execution.

          • Lvxferre@lemmy.ml
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            Yup, it does need a better execution. However there are three things on our favour in the Fediverse:

            • each instance is considerably smaller than Reddit → each comm matters more → admins are more likely to intervene if a comm suddenly shuts itself down
            • smaller size → case-by-case analysis is more viable → it’s easier to take the right decision
            • no corporate interests → one less thing to distract the admins from “think on the users!” → admins are more likely to intervene for the well being of their overall community
  • DocMcStuffin@lemmy.world
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    Hot take: it’s childish and self-centered of them. Basically: “Hey I know we got this great commy here, but we’re locking it to force everything to this other commy. Cheers!” If they don’t want to be mods here and want to spend their time over there, good for them. But this whole we-are-going-to-deny-you-this-commy-on-this-instance isn’t kosher. Do they think it’s their own personal kingdom?

  • AnonymousLlama@kbin.social
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    I feel any communities/magazines that get abandoned (e.g. let’s close this one down so we can funnel all the traffic to another place) should be deleted by admins and allowed to be claimed by someone else.

    I’m not a fan of domain squatting, so there needs to be I feel some admin input when it comes to contested magazines. In the gold rush that is the reddit Exodus, what’s stopping people from people squatting on good names and then never posting content

    This whole situation feels messy and I’m not entirely sure what would make it better for everyone

  • WhoRoger@lemmy.world
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    This is bullshit. I am of the opinion that mods more or less own the sublemmy, but if they abandon it, either by just stopping to care or purposefully, then they should leave it to others to find and use it.

    Especially of it’s something general purpose like the most bloody popular OS on Earth. Where else should we show off friendly competition, debate and cooperation than when it comes to a product of one of the biggest monopolies that exist today?

    And no offense to Reddit mods, but everyone here is starting from scratch and they need to prove themselves just as much as everybody else. Reddit mods don’t have the best reputation as a group to begin with. This isn’t Reddit 2.0.

    • discodoubloon@kbin.social
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      That’s an interesting track. Why should the mods be allowed to close the sub? If this is trying to be a more democratic space then things shouldn’t happen in the shadows necessarily. Especially without 19k others that signed up to see content.

      I think the “magazine/sub” should be allowed to stand alone as if it were its own content reserve. Maybe Librarians are a good model to follow here. If we truly care about the democratic and federated let’s not allow people to Willy-nilly delete all the data.

  • JJROKCZ@lemmy.world
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    Allowed in the tos or not, it WILL happen here just like it did on Reddit. I do believe that if you want to be the primo community for something then it’s on you to make that happen though, bullying someone out isn’t right morally but there’s little way of stopping it happening

  • Pika@lemmy.world
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    I originally disliked this, but I was thinking about it and have changed my mind. Yea this isn’t right. if you are closing a community it should be deleted to allow freedom for the next person to use the name. It wouldn’t be enforceable at a federation level but, this 100% would be a good instance level rule. Don’t take me wrong, I am not against temporary locks for issues internally or for staffing problems, but what was done here was essentially in the domain world what is called a “park” where the name is no longer available for anyone else, but is not being used. I don’t think Parking should be allowed, it inhibits growth. This sets a precedent where it would be allowed to make ghost communities here that exist in other instances solely so the community can’t exist here as well, it’s very anti-user and in my opinion potentially anti-federation.

    • discodoubloon@kbin.social
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      But they are also denying all the people that are here that wanted to see that content.

      Subs/etc shouldn’t be deleted by the moderators. Why not allow people to continue? What are the mods adding by deleting everything?

      Wouldn’t just leaving the sub behind be the most open thing to do?

      • Elle@lemmy.worldM
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        I think there’s a slight misunderstanding here. The moderators of /c/Android@lemmy.world have only locked it, and so the posts there do remain visible.

        The person you’re replying to is suggesting that such a locked community be deleted to restore access to the community name so someone could recreate it and…Yeah, I agree with you, that shouldn’t be the course of action taken, since it would wipe out what the community had built.

  • CeruleanRuin
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    Well now we have subreddit community drama. Look at us. We’re growing up so fast!

  • mookulator@lemmy.world
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    Should the owners of a community be allowed to close their community? Yes.

    Whether you like their reasoning or not, all that happened is they chose to close their community.

      • mookulator@lemmy.world
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        First off , I can tell that this is an emotionally-charged event for a lot of people, so I’ll try to de-escalate and avoid this becoming counterproductive…

        I can understand where you’re coming from. Having a big, functioning community like that is not just enjoyable, it’s really useful. Especially for something like android which thrives on public ideas.

        I should also say I’m a total a novice here, was not part of that community, and don’t know much about Lemmy.

        That said, I just don’t see a reason to make a rule to prevent a community from shutting down if the owners prefer a different instance’s community. They made the community, they can shut it down. It’s like if any ordinary website was just like “Ok, we’re done. We think our competitors are better anyway”. The users would just have to live with that right? Even if they morally disagree with the owners of the competitors, even if they believe the owners of the website were wrong about that assessment. As long as the owners of the new community don’t force the old community to shut down somehow, then that’s just life isn’t it?

        I could see an argument that it should be bad fediverse etiquette to shut down without offering to pass the torch to someone else. That would have been a better thing to do. But it can’t be a rule. Who would enforce it anyway? And how?

      • cloaker@kbin.social
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        Anyone should be able to restart it but I think if the mods decided they wanted to close that it should be a new sub with new mods and no subscribers.

    • Pika@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I agree with temporary locking due to staffing or internal issues. A permanent lock is not something that should be allowed. If it’s a permanent close delete the community, even reddit had that process as part of it’s SOP. The entire mindset of it is you can have your own communities and separation. In this case it is now impossible to host an android community on this instance with the name “android” which is their entire intent(they don’t want to fracture the community). I find this no different then the user that was banned a few days ago for making a bunch of popular community names, the result is the same just at a lower quantity.

    • Lvxferre@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      Should the owners of a community be allowed to close their community? Yes.

      I don’t think that moderators should be seen as the owners of a community, as in a monarchy; at most their representatives and ruling body, as in a republic. Based on that, you got 19k owners of the community having no say, and 2 owners deciding it for the rest.

      Alternatively, we might as well say that the admins are the true owners of a community, given that they’re legally and financially responsible for it. In that case, it should be up to the admins to decide.