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Kbin Covenant? Top level rules for allowed/disallowed content? Governance?

In Mastodon, we have the Covenant, which starts with:

"Active moderation against racism, sexism, homophobia and transphobia
Users must have the confidence that they are joining a safe space, free from white supremacy, anti-semitism and transphobia of other platforms."

I have not seen proposals yet for a similar baseline of rules for Kbin servers, generally. Have I missed one?

Spammers are already here, and I assume nazis and CP types will become known soon unless there is a broad moderation/anti-harassment consensus explicitly stated. I do not know where the kbin.social server is physically located, and which laws govern the content herein.

I think the server owner gets final say in all matters, but that the community here needs to drive this effort so that ernest can focus on the overall development roadmap.

How might we, as a community, come up with a code of conduct that builds a foundation to stave off rot for as long as possible?

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  • I think most admins are just going to be focusing on actual hate groups, not tone policing. Most people are generally going to be tolerant of mistakes and misconceptions. As for how it should be defined, I have some ideas; don't use slurs or make derogatory statements against a group of people, don't promote fascism or nazism, don't spread conspiracy theories about certain groups of people, no excusing human rights abuses or denial of it where there is clear evidence. Some examples would be using the N word, saying all or most LGBT+ people are pedophiles or are accepting of it, excusing Putin's behavior, Holocaust denial, and accusing Jewish people of having deadly space lasers. Regarding slurs, I support oppressed people reclaiming them, but general use of them needs to be restricted.

    • I think most admins are just going to be focusing on actual hate groups, not tone policing.

      I would like to believe you. However, my experience from Reddit is that people love to "police tone", and even the definition of a hate group has elements of tone policing in it (some groups, usually right-of-center politically, get labeled as "hate groups" even when they don't promote or encourage violence).

      I guess what I'm trying to say is that without a really explicit, specific definition of what isn't allowed, moderators and admins will use it as an excuse to silence legitimate viewpoints they disagree with. We'll end up with r/politics all over again (a subreddit notorious for blatantly removing content favoring the political right and banning users for posting such content).

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