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8 votes
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Witness History spoke to photographer Mark Edwards, who was given unique access to document a famously photo shy community of Christiania in Denmark
11 votes -
Europe's newest industrial megaprojects are relocating to the far north of Sweden – but are curling, wild reindeer and the northern lights enough to convince workers to follow?
12 votes -
Whatever happened to the Palms, dubbed America’s first LGBTQ retirement community?
5 votes -
Recent wave of transphobic narratives worries trans community
16 votes -
A battle among homeowners in Colorado shows how license plate scanners are reshaping American neighborhoods
10 votes -
Fightcade 2 - One of the best things to happen to the fighting game community
3 votes -
On smarm
3 votes -
The unbelievable grimness of /r/HermanCainAward, the subreddit that catalogs anti-vaxxer COVID deaths
30 votes -
Housing in Alaska can’t survive climate change. This group is trying a new model.
3 votes -
Denmark's hippie, psychedelic oasis Christiania turns fifty – celebration over four days includes parades, speeches, exhibitions, workshops, shows and concerts
4 votes -
Last year, three "seasteading" enthusiasts bought a cruise ship to use as the core of a libertarian cryptocurrency utopia off Panama's coast. The plan fell apart before it made it across the ocean.
17 votes -
The last glimpses of California's vanishing hippie utopias
12 votes -
Democracy should be sentimentalist not rationalist
6 votes -
Inside the secret world of India’s adult breastfeeding community
11 votes -
From the 1910s to the 1930s, John Alinder portrayed the local people of rural Sweden, the landscape around them and their way of life
12 votes -
Homeownership can bring out the worst in you
14 votes -
More development would ruin our neighborhood’s character and that character is systemic racism
18 votes -
It's been ten years since seventy-seven people were massacred in a far-right terror attack in Utøya – ten years on, what has changed in Norway?
15 votes -
When Brayden Bushby was charged with the death of Barbara Kentner, Indigenous faith in Canada’s legal system was put to the test
4 votes -
Where do you get your sense of community from?
After posting this comment I realized I'd like to ask Tildes directly where you all get a sense of community from.
23 votes -
The city dwellers trying to build a tight-knit community from scratch
8 votes -
What the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre destroyed
12 votes -
What Internet memes get wrong about Breezewood, Pennsylvania
6 votes -
To be more tech-savvy, borrow these strategies from the Amish
10 votes -
The things we do and do not say - Notes on the impossibility of talking online and rise of disinterpretation
19 votes -
The revolution in classic Tetris - A younger generation is utilizing the internet to master the NES game in months, surpassing milestones that previously took decades
22 votes -
What charities/orgs are measurably effective in bringing people out of poverty and violence in US?
The recent rise in hate crimes against Asian Americans has been an emotional topic for me. The thing that makes me sad is, it seems the most I can do to de-escalate a violent situation I see on...
The recent rise in hate crimes against Asian Americans has been an emotional topic for me. The thing that makes me sad is, it seems the most I can do to de-escalate a violent situation I see on the news without putting myself in clear danger is to basically distract the aggressor from afar and comfort the victim afterwards.
What makes the matter more complicated is, if you look at the demographics of those who tend to commit these violent crimes against Asian people, they're often other minorities. It's so easy to fall into a trap of undermining the progress we've made in racial/social equality the moment we acknowledge that Asians are being targeted. For similar reasons, I view that our political system is entirely ill-equipped to handle this matter in a sustainable matter.
But I'd still like to turn this into something positive. Because I live comfortably as an engineer in the Bay Area, I was thinking I can donate to charities and organizations that are effective at bringing an end to this violence every time I see news about an Asian American getting targeted on social media. I plan on doing my own research as well, but I hope you can also give some suggestions.
19 votes -
History of dunking culture's transformation into the alt right, the reputation of Tumblr
15 votes -
Thoughts on running online communities from the creator of Improbable Island
15 votes -
Sheffield United's LGBT+ fan group helps fans feel connected during pandemic
6 votes -
Covid-hit New Orleans turns homes into floats for Mardi Gras
5 votes -
Norway approves Utøya memorial for victims of 2011 massacre, despite local concerns – memorial is expected to be ready for the tenth anniversary of the attacks on 22nd July
8 votes -
Who's on the fediverse?
There was a thread about this coincidentally exactly one year ago, give or take three hours. Ah, to be back in January 2020 I've been poking around on the fediverse again and I figured I'll never...
There was a thread about this coincidentally exactly one year ago, give or take three hours. Ah, to be back in January 2020
I've been poking around on the fediverse again and I figured I'll never start using it unless I'm following some people. So, who here is on it? Please share some other people you follow, if you like.
I made an account a while back, and it was on the default instance since I didn't know any others to choose. I feel like it's a deliberate choice though (if nothing else it will give me a more curated timeline to scroll through) so I'd like to be deliberate about it at some point.
17 votes -
The high price of mistrust
10 votes -
Rethinking votes
I know we have talked about it to death, and even run experiments on the mechanism, but I think it's worth re-evaluating the idea of voting on comments. I know that voting provides value to Tildes...
I know we have talked about it to death, and even run experiments on the mechanism, but I think it's worth re-evaluating the idea of voting on comments.
I know that voting provides value to Tildes as a social platform; it acts almost like a social currency; you know that if you have a lot of votes, people appreciate what you have to say. That provides incentive for people to write more comments and participate with the community.
What I and others have come to realize is that votes also have negative effects on our community. Here's a short list of negative effects:
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Voting is addictive. I'm sure most of us are familiar with the process of clicking on our usernames to see how many votes our last few comments have gathered. We do this because it's a dopamine hit; they act like tiny digital love letters telling us how awesome we are.
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Voting is a measurement of popularity. Those love letters aren't actually how good you are, they measure how popular your ideas are. In other words, votes encourage group-think and creates an echo chamber that will prevent you from taking competing ideas seriously.
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Because of number 2, we alienate people with other ideas and reduce the richness and quality of discussion on this platform.
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Also as a result of number 2, the information that gets put into those popular threads becomes the de facto truth - weather or not it's actually true. This can prevent us from seeing the "bigger picture" or from understanding problems others might have with how we think.
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The end result of all of these effects is that we will slowly become more and more extreme and insular as time progresses. We essentially become the same as the people stuck in conservative media prisons that we tend to look down on.
Personally speaking, I think that we would be a much more robust community if we had more conservative voices speaking up. After all, the left does not have a monopoly on the objective truth. I know we probably have a few conservatives that are lurking around, but I think that they are largely disincentivized to contribute because they don't get the same kind of votes left-leaning comments do.
With that being said, I would like to hear back from everyone what they think we should do about voting. Should we go back to hiding vote totals again? Should we get rid of them entirely? Or maybe you think things are good as they are? Please let us know your reasoning.
26 votes -
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Microsoft killed the Zune, but Zune-Heads are still here
9 votes -
Thoughts on the difficulties of content moderation, and implications for decentralised communities
12 votes -
My mommies and me
7 votes -
An invasion of king crabs from Russia into Norway created a lucrative fishing industry – and difficult choices
6 votes -
The Skeleton Lake - Genetic analysis of human remains found in the Himalayas has raised baffling questions about who these people were and why they were there
11 votes -
'Flexing their power': How America's richest zip code stays exclusive
8 votes -
Freemasons say they're needed now more than ever. So why are their ranks dwindling?
8 votes -
Danish murder on Bornholm island raises tension in race debate – rights groups have reacted by questioning whether potential hate crimes are being seriously investigated
8 votes -
The impact of toxic influencers on communities
11 votes -
Austrian village of 'Fucking' decides to change its name
15 votes -
How Nintendo has hurt the Smash community
11 votes -
Benno Rice: What UNIX Cost Us
10 votes -
Privacy is a lonely bastion. Anyone know how to meet friends online these days?
At some point we recognized the signs of desperation. My wife and I had been running to the window like puppies for a glimpse of any unusual traffic. We caught ourselves bingeing on news articles,...
At some point we recognized the signs of desperation. My wife and I had been running to the window like puppies for a glimpse of any unusual traffic. We caught ourselves bingeing on news articles, as if saturating ourselves with reporting could somehow make us relevant to a world that saw less and less of us. We even resorted to calling my mother. After listening to 90 uninterrupted minutes of narration regarding her most recent routine doctor’s visit, we broke down. We resolved to end the isolation that was slowly killing us. Then the pandemic hit.
Our biggest stumbling block is figuring out how can we make friends online using only privacy-respecting platforms and software? We would like to see some friendly faces in real time without being simultaneously, you know, mined. Could anyone in the know share suggestions?
Edit: I'm grateful people are considering this. Thank you! I find it helps to ask people what their ideal solution would be, no matter how far-fetched. So, in response to that: My dream platform/venue/project would meld aspects of Lunchclub with The Human Library. I have stories to tell. I would love to video chat with fully-clothed individuals drawn from all over the world, chosen based on their stories and ambitions. It would work the way a good host does. You know, "Greta once had the job of getting sweat stains out of Bruce Springsteen's guitar strap. You two should swap cleaning stories, since you work at that drycleaner's, right, Butchie? Is it true it's a front for the mob? Oh, excuse me, I have to disinfect the pizza guy. I'll leave you to it." Maybe I should flesh this out more.
36 votes -
The COVID cruise ship and the Maine fishing town
4 votes