this post was submitted on 09 Apr 2026
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Obviously, the internet has always been a toxic place, (the phrase "flame war" has been around for decades,) but it seems to have gotten so much worse over the last few years. I used to think decentralization of the internet would fix the worst of it, but Lemmy seems to have gotten worse alongside the rest of internet culture, proving me wrong. How do we fix/improve this culture of toxicity?

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[–] BygoneNeutrino@lemmy.world 2 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

If we block and ban everyone that thinks differently from us, we can create a utopian paradise where everyone thinks the same. This might go on for years-decades maybe-until Elon Musk perfects his Neurolink protocol. At that point we will merge our thoughts, creating the ultimate Unity.

There will be no more hunger, no more pain. Dissent will be unthinkable. We will become....One.

One thing is to ensure that people understand you won't take their bullshit anymore. Mass muting, banning, and deplatforming helps get rid of a lot of toxicity because said people are only interested in it.

[–] CombatWombat@feddit.online 8 points 2 days ago

Moderation. We had a big influx of users with the Reddit api drama that created a bunch of communities, and then all returned to Reddit shortly thereafter, leaving most of the big communities largely unmoderated. The threadiverse isn’t going to become less toxic until new moderators step in and clean up the worst of it.

[–] bibbasa@piefed.social 7 points 2 days ago

lemmy/piefed have been getting a surge of users from reddit. i can't imagine algorithmic brainrot fades overnight.

[–] magnetosphere@fedia.io 7 points 2 days ago (1 children)

Downvoting just gives trolls the negative attention they want. Ignore, block, and/or report. That’s it. We can’t change human nature.

[–] PlzGivHugs@sh.itjust.works 7 points 2 days ago (1 children)

Its not so much the outright tolls I'm concerned about (voting alone filters most out), as the general toxicity in the culture. Things like increasingly widespread personal attacks, decreased etiquette and consideration for others, and just the general death of discourse.

[–] magnetosphere@fedia.io 9 points 2 days ago

Oh, I see. In that case, I think the best we can do is set a good example. For example, I try not to let myself get drawn into childish arguments.

[–] Kirk@startrek.website 7 points 2 days ago

As you said, decentralization is key. Highly active human moderation is the only known solution to keep communities free and tolerant, and human mods have a relatively low limit as to what they can handle without making it a full time job (or burning it out)

The Lemmy network is still centralized enough that many smaller instances make the calculus that it's better to be federated with the large weakly moderated instances than to lose access to the many small communities on those instances.

But increased decentralization makes more granular defederation possible. A weakly moderated instance can simply be blocked.

I think we'll get there in time.

[–] mrmaplebar@fedia.io 5 points 2 days ago (1 children)

I'm not positive that you can do much outside of simply (temporarily or permanently) banning people who are acting shitty.

On the flip side, banning people because they disagree with you is how we end up with the kind of echo chambers that breed other socially toxic problems like strict partisanship, and cults of personality... so it's a fine line.

Generally I don't see a lot of people on Lemmy acting like straight-up assholes. I don't always agree with people, and I think there is a potential for "flame wars" and arguments, but as long as everyone is acting in good faith and being reasonable about what they are expressing I feel that's generally an acceptable level of conflict.

I've never wanted someone banned because they said something I didn't like. Like... If someone wanted to come here and make the case for why Donald Trump is a great president, I would love to see them try. The real problem is when people resort only to trolling and forego any attempt at having a real good-faith conversation. That's when the relationship breaks down and the conversation is no longer conducive to running a real community. When people start acting like assholes, making personal attacks, or continually arguing in bad-faith, then I think it warrants at least a temporary ban.

The goal of the internet should not be conflict avoidance or group-think, but mutual respect and treating each other like human beings. For the most part, I think the Fediverse is pretty good about that.

[–] Kirk@startrek.website 1 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

I’m not positive that you can do much outside of simply (temporarily or permanently) banning people who are acting shitty.

You can also ask that your admins defederate instances where shitty-acting people are allowed to set up shop.

[–] ruuster13@lemmy.zip 5 points 2 days ago

You have to treat the toxicity in society to treat it on social media. If, for example, you banned all the "negative" toxic accounts, Lemmy would become a bastion of toxic positivity. The people would sense its fraudulence and leave, and it would still be toxic. Eradicating bots would probably be an effective step toward a solution.

[–] AA5B@lemmy.world 5 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

I can really only compare to Reddit and find the fediverse generally better

But those outliers are a doozy. I don’t recall even wanting to block anyone on Reddit but have blocked at least half a dozen here. Just earlier today I had to because we were enjoying a nice discussion, then someone stumbled in saying they’ve debated politics with me, starts attacking, trying to start an argument over something completely unrelated ….. Reddit had plenty of trolls but I never encountered anyone there who followed me around to be an asshole.

So on the one hand the capability of blocking anyone is a great way to stop seeing the most toxic part of the fediverse, but on the other hand there’s got to be a more permanent solution

[–] Gonzako@lemmy.world 1 points 1 day ago

Ill be honest I read it as reintroduce not reduce lol

People are a little bit toxic so people gathering place will be too.

I don’t think it’s a massive problem as it mostly seems to take care of itself with some effective moderation.

[–] tal@lemmy.today 4 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

Obviously, the internet has always been a toxic place, (the phrase “flame war” has been around for decades,) but it seems to have gotten so much worse over the last few years.

Ehhh. I don't know. I think that there are ways in which it's gotten better and ways in which it's gotten worse over time.

I never really used any of the big social media sites that rely on automated recommendations to any degree. I understand that a major factor was that they measured user engagement, and what we found is that users are considerably more-engaged with content that enraged them than pretty much anything else. They tended to recommend material in that vein. I think that this discovery (as well as the ability to easily measure views on traditional-media sites) also encouraged ragebait to be posted.

That probably is a step back.

The Internet is a lot more diverse of a place than it once was. Back around, say, the 1990s, it was mostly university people, engineering types, stuff like that. A lot of countries had very few people online. You had fewer points of disagreement in a number of areas. But bring people with a wider variety of views into the situation, and you have more room for conflict, I think. I think that to some degree, that's just intrinsic to having a more-diverse Internet, throwing all of humanity (or at least everyone that can more-or-less speak a language, which for English, is a lot of people) just means that people from different walks of life and social norms suddenly encounter each other, and, well, ideas clash.

I feel like there is a real sense in which very negative worldviews are more-prominent, maybe partly because of media


and not just social media, but traditional media


favoring more-alarmist articles and titles. Doomerism, like. That's not so much directly toxic, but I think that people who feel stressed-out tend to be less-pleasant.

And the Internet permitted for forums and media chambers that are very much aligned with specific individual groups; it's easier to live in echo chambers. The long tail


the Internet is so large and permits for so many niche environments that people don't have to be exposed to broader views in society if they don't want to. I think that that tends to let people demonize other people more-readily, if they don't interact with them.

On the other hand:

Trolling (in the sense of trying to post provocative comments that would incite a flamewar) used to be very common on forums I'd used, like Slashdot. I don't see much of that on the Threadiverse.

Usenet permitted crossposting articles to multiple Usenet groups. Clients tended to default to respond to all of these. This resulted in people trying to crosspost articles between groups that had users with conflicting views (e.g. comp.os.ms-windows.advocacy and comp.sys.mac.advocacy) to induce conflict. That's not how current Lemmy handles crossposting


instead, replies go to one community. (PieFed does merge discussions into a single page, though.)

Widespread community moderation, which showed up on Reddit (and the Threadiverse, as it followed in its footsteps) has also improved things a fair bit. Usenet had efforts at tacked-on moderation that weren't incredibly effective.

[–] anon6789@lemmy.world 3 points 2 days ago

I think all we can really do is set an example ourselves and to allow mods to do their jobs. We can only really control our own behavior, especially a place like Lemmy where it's basically impossible to ban someone.

I try to keep my posts PG, try to understand others, ignore people I can't find common ground with, and just try to be the type of poster/commenter I'd like to interact with.

[–] tal@lemmy.today 3 points 2 days ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (2 children)

My own personal thoughts on things that might change to improve:

  • I'm pretty interested about the prospects for something like "curated lists", where people can publish ban lists or "upvote lists" or something like that that users can subscribe to if they decide that they like a particular curation list's material. Something that can leverage positive and negative recommendations more-readily. My understanding is that Bluesky has something along those lines.

  • Reddit originally was intended to rely on voting to do per-user recommendation. Over the years, it kind of drifted away from that. At the time I left, it still didn't do that. I think that it's probably also possible to create automated recommendations based on things like a user's upvotes. I suppose that there's some echo chamber potential here, depending upon how one votes.

  • I see a lot of people being negative on the Threadiverse, people that sound often depressed or something, but not really people fighting between each other that much. There are people who could be nicer, but in terms of interpersonal fighting, I don't see that much. That being said, I do avoid some instances.

  • Beehaw.org has a relatively-restrictive moderation policy. That's not what I personally prefer, but I will say that it has a fairly-upbeat set of discussions on its communities compared to most instances. It defederated with lemmy.world, but has not with lemmy.today (my home instance) and a number of others, so if you're specifically on the hunt for more-positive conversation, you might investigate it.

  • My own personal belief is that making votes public has reduced the amount of "I disagree with you, so I downvote" stuff. It's also possible that there are other factors going on, but I think that after lemvotes.org in particular became widely-available, the amount of what I'd call downvoting in discussions on controversial topics declined on here. There have been some instances that disallow downvotes entirely (beehaw.org is an example of an instance that does this).

  • From a moderation standpoint, there are some policies from Reddit subreddits that I think were generally successful. /r/Europe had a pretty hard "do not edit article titles" rule. This went further than I personally would have, as sometimes I think that adding context to a title could be useful, but that avoided a lot of issues where people would insert their personal positions into post submissions rather than in a top-level comment. I think that some form of that can be a useful convention.

  • On an directly-opposing note: I think that a lot of articles are clickbait (and some are ragebait, and the latter tends to drive unpleasantness). I've seen various proposals to try to let users submit alternate article titles and those be voted on or something like that. Maybe it'd be a good idea to let users submit alternate titles and mods pick from them or something like that. Reddit didn't do that, but maybe things along those lines could be successfully done.

  • In general, I don't think that Reddit got many things wrong. One thing I think it did get wrong was to change how blocking worked at one point from "I ignore all comments from a user" to "that user cannot respond to me". The Threadiverse software packages presently work like "old Reddit". I think that that's a good idea. On Reddit, this change to how blocking worked resulted in a lot of people posting inflammatory content, then blocking the other user so that they couldn't respond, so it'd look like the other user had conceded the point. Then the other user


now infuriated


would go start responding to other comments in a thread pointing out that this first user had blocked them. That never ended well.

  • We do have automated stuff to try to detect tone, sentiment analysis. This sometimes gets used to do things like identify users getting upset in automated calls and direct them to a human. It might be possible to automatically flag potential flamewars for moderators, to reduce the time until they get noticed.
[–] Kirk@startrek.website 3 points 1 day ago

Beehaw's admin and mod team is a great example of how strong moderation encourages, not discourages, good conversation.

[–] AskewLord@piefed.social 2 points 1 day ago

Yes, I notice when reddit implemented that version of blocking... things got much worse. And people just started blcoking anyone who remote disagreed with them... it was suppose to be for preventing people from harassing you, but that's not how people used it.

pre-block reddit was a lot chiller place. it was much more interested and diverse and for me was a good learning place, but once people started echo chambering themselves in my communities, it got nastier and nastier and the qualify of content and good faith exchanges dropped and hostility skyrocketed.

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