Just to clarify, I don’t think it’s a problem that hatred is minimal here, and I don’t just mean politics.

I feel like I very rarely see alternative opinions about anything, whether it be software, ai, news about companies, etc. it just seems like everyone universally agrees about anything with only a tiny handful of exceptions.

It makes me hesitant to believe I’m on the “correct side” and I never see any arguments from opposition. This makes me worried that I’m in some sort of echo chamber. In real life, I do see much more diverse opinions and, if I only used the fediverse for social media, would likely be weaker in defending my own since their arguments would be “new” to me.

I understand the reasons for which the fediverse has pretty collective opinion, but it does still worry me. I want to be able to see all the other people with their own thoughts (given it’s respectful) on the Internet, which should be the most capable tool to do so.

  • surewhynotlem@lemmy.world
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    There’s plenty of diversity here. Loads and loads. I see it in every single thread.

    But it’s different than the diversity on other platforms. The diversity on other platforms is like “should we feed the homeless or should we bomb another country?”. And the diversity here is more like. “Obviously we need to feed the homeless, that’s not a question, but we differ on how we accomplish that goal”.

    If you’re looking for that other sort of diversity, you need to find a site with more sociopaths.

    • MissesAutumnRains@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      I actually agree with you here. My first thought was the anarchist communities here. Sometimes I agree with the sentiment of a post there, sometimes I don’t. I think we largely agree on a rough framework of the world, though, which is, like you said, different from the complete inability to agree on the fundamentals.

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        Yeah, it is like how most if not all European countries have more than two political parties, which usually leads to a more sensible discourse than the one seen on reddit/USA.

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      And most people here live in a city and work in IT. Like, take the 10% of your area that agrees with you the most and there’s going to be vastly more diversity of thought and opinion.

      You know what they say about thinking everyone else is an asshole…

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      one thing i have noticed here is that often people will engage in actually productive discussion even if they disagree. I also welcome being corrected, often that is the best thing here since it lets me actually learn/correct something with my thoughts.

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      The tankie instances seem full of people without empathy, so that’s a start I guess if you want more sociopaths…

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    you should probably feel some amount of discomfort with your own views and be willing to adjust them as your exposure to better reasoning and evidence supports a different view

    but I also don’t think we should have obligatory “both-sides” on everything either, sometimes it’s OK to have a consensus, like the Holocaust was wrong - I’m OK that most people on Lemmy agree with that view

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      Most people IRL agree with that view.

      Now try “Linux is the most mainstream OS you should consider” or “only terrible people would vote Republican”. Agreement on Lemmy will be 90-some percent. Agreement IRL will be a distinct minority.

      • trxxruraxvr@lemmy.world
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        People on lemmy will say that Linux should be mainstream, but I don’t think most people are so delusional that they think it is.

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          I meant most mainstream, as in they might be okay with OpenBSD as well.

          People have to be aware Linux is itself a weird nerd thing, although like in this thread there seems to be a reluctance to admit we’re not a representative sample of the population.

      • Wildmimic@anarchist.nexus
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        If you take away the polemics, the reality of majority opinions here is:

        At the current moment in time only terrible or completely uninformed people vote republican, and everyone should consider linux, but i can understand if someone wants to use windows for ease of use.

        and those are well reflected, humanistic viewpoints. There are other viewpoints too, but i would say they are not well reflected or accusatory out of their own failings. Reality HAS a left wing bias after all.

        • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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          but i can understand if someone wants to use windows for ease of use.

          Lemmy probably disagrees with that. I mean, I could argue with it.

          Even if they’re right they’re highly unusual, echo-chambery things. America is 1/3 solid Democrats and even some of those people are going to try to coexist. Most people have a very vague idea of what Linux even is. Some might not have heard of it at all.

          And Lemmy contains a lot of polemics.

        • Cethin@lemmy.zip
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          everyone should consider linux, but i can understand if someone wants to use windows for ease of use.

          I’ll be the one to argue with this then, since no one else has. Windows is not easier to use. People are just used to it. I’ll agree there are some cases where it’s easier, where you need certain software that doesn’t work on Linux, but usually it isn’t anymore. If you don’t want to put in a little effort into learning something new then fine, though you’ll have to when changing Windows versions too. If you want the easiest OS to use, Linux is the best choice. It doesn’t behave identically to Windows does though, so you have to be willing to accept change.

          • Wildmimic@anarchist.nexus
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            I must argue back, sadly. For someone like me who knows how to search the web for exactly the wording that is relevant for my issue, because i know how PCs in general work, how to scour through log files and how to formulate my search terms, Linux is fine, even if it has (still) some rough edges. (why the hell is there no graphical service manager installed on fedora per default for example? I know how to use the command line for this, others might not.)

            If someone just want to use their PC for gaming with no issues at all, don’t want to research workarounds if you run into hitches or want to play current multiplayer titles, windows still has an edge (even if it’s a bit of an artificial one regarding anticheats). If you leave the safe environment of Steam, Epic, GoG and Amazon (with Heroic), and want to just install a game with an downloaded installer, the learning curve gets steep pretty fast for someone who doesn’t know shit about computers. Under Windows it’s a doubleclick (or a singleclick in your browsers download manager) and clicking next/finish. Flatpak has helped here in some circumstances, but comes with it’s own limitations if you don’t know why your downloaded program can’t access anything outside your home directory for example.

            For someone who has used only windows in the last 20 years and is used to a specific workflow for whatever they wanna do (like people who digitize VHS tapes or similar “legacy” tasks), it will most likely be hard to switch over too - and why should they? (We both know why they SHOULD, but it will not be obvious or easy for those people)

            Then there is another aspect: if you can’t speak english most good sources for troubleshooting are out of your reach. I’m in a german language country - if i had to limit myself to only german language sources everytime i run into some issue, i would have given up pretty soon. Baby boomers in this country have atrocious english language skills in general.

            So you see: Everyone should consider Linux, but if you are old, don’t have technical knowledge, don’t speak english, do some task you have done the same way the last decade ,… the difficulty of switching might be too much without someone who helps them and is available when something breaks.

            • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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              Debian is pretty plug and play. Ubuntu tries to be idiot-proof like Windows on top of it. If like most people you don’t do your own tech support it’s a non-issue for the most part. Either way you take it to the guy who set it up if something breaks or needs changing.

              Gaming would be the exception where you still need Windows. It’s getting better but support is not universal.

              Then there is another aspect: if you can’t speak english most good sources for troubleshooting are out of your reach.

              Yeah, I could see how that would be hard.

            • Cethin@lemmy.zip
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              Most of your “people who should think about staying on Windows” are not typical users, outside of AAA multiplayer specifically (currently, though it looks like EA at least is maybe changing). Yeah, it’s harder to play games from sources other than Steam, Epic, GoG, but how many are? If you are, then you’re also probably technically knowledgeable and you’ll be fine. No one who “doesn’t know shit” about computers is getting things from sources besides these.

              For someone who has used only windows in the last 20 years and is used to a specific workflow for whatever they wanna do… , it will most likely be hard to switch over too - and why should they?

              This is the point I made. It’s easier on Linux often (OK, maybe not that niche thing, but who’s doing that?). It requires relearning though. They probably dealt with a lot of shit setting the work flow up in Windows. I’m not saying they should change. However, I am saying comparing switching to Linux from Windows is not the same as comparing Linux and Windows. In a vacuum, for the average user, I’m almost certain Linux is easier at this point. Just compare the install process for most common distros to that of Windows. It’s crazy how much simpler and easier it is. Is that easier than just doing nothing? Obviously not, and that’s not what I claimed.

        • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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          I mean, what makes a terrible person vs. a typically flawed human is massively subject to debate. Actually, the nature of morality itself is.

          The thing about Linux is more defencible, but most people IRL have a vague idea at best what it even is. It doesn’t have to be untrue to be unpopular.

    • apftwb@lemmy.world
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      On Reddit, I sometimes pop over to the r/conservative subreddit to see their take on issues. Mostly to get a temperature read on how they are feeling about news events. No equivalent to that on Lemmy.

      • dandelion@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        there are absolutely conservative lemmy instances, but again I’m not sure what the value is of this - conservative ideology is broadly reality denying (even by their own admission), and it’s just poor reasoning that different opinions are always valuable to be acquainted with and take seriously.

        For example, I do not think that medical students should be taking classes in astrology, alchemy, homeopathy, and chiropractic as well as their classes on biology, chemistry, anatomy & physiology, etc.

        We can evaluate different viewpoints on the merits of how well they are based on reason or evidence, and dismiss poorly reasoned or poorly evidenced views (or better, views that are proven wrong through reasoning or evidence).

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          The value is learning about how they view the world.

          If I understand them, I understand the world better not because they have a deeper understanding, but because they have reality denying viewpoints that 23-45% of my fellow countrymen share.

          • dandelion@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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            yes, that’s admittedly valuable, this is why I’ve spent so much time studying Christianity and talking to Christians about their beliefs; but the OP put me in the mindset of thinking about diversity of viewpoints to ensure an accurate or correct viewpoint, which is a separate goal or concern - so I thought it was being implied that reading /r/conservative views is a valuable exercise because it helps us develop more accurate or better views (which I don’t think is likely)

            • apftwb@lemmy.world
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              But its not abnormal. Last election, it was basically half the country.

              Also it is dynamic. Right now their worldview is completely in flux because they shape their opinions around whatever Trump is doing that week. But its getting legitimately hard for them keep up and Trump is loosing support online and in polls (55 to 23-33%) because of that.

              • But its not abnormal. Last election, it was basically half the country.

                No, it was a third of the country. Regardless, we’re not talking normality in the sense of what’s average or prevalent, but rather deviation from the normal, healthy operation of the human mind. That whole third of the US population seems to be suffering the psychological symptoms of lead poisoning, for instance, and that’s abnormal.

                Right now their worldview is completely in flux because they shape their opinions around whatever Trump is doing that week.

                Wrong again. They shape their opinions around whatever helps them maintain control, impose rationality, and avoid consequences. They follow Trump because they see in him a fast track to a society that caters to this mindset.

                But its getting legitimately hard for them keep up and Trump is loosing support online and in polls (55 to 23-33%) because of that.

                Because he is seeming less and less to them like the guy who will be their fast track to a society that caters to their mindset. The personal cost to them for pursuing this course is growing beyond the point where their perceived reward is worthwhile.

                • RickeySpanish@lemmus.org
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                  “They shape their opinions around whatever helps them maintain control, impose rationality, and avoid consequences.”

                  Perfect. You can’t argue with them because they don’t actually believe anything. Fucking brainless pod people

          • DamnianWayne@lemmy.world
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            The value is learning about how they view the world

            Why is that valuable? These people hold onto their viewpoints not from reason or logic, but emotional media manipulation.

            Us being aware of whatever topic they are frothing at the mouth over this week does not help in any meaningful way. It’s not like we can debate them into coming sround.

            • dandelion@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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              for example, understanding an enemy is important to combating them - being able to understand and anticipate their psychology helps approach them in a better and more informed way

              e.g. I learned that religious fundamentalists cast a stark, black-and-white picture of a war or battle between insiders and outsiders, so by not playing into that dynamic I can sort of undermine their worldview, which then opens the room for humanizing outsiders and helping insiders escape their cult

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    You’re just used to seeing troll factory inflamed opinions on other platforms. On ad-supported social media moderators don’t ban the trolls because “user number go up!”. On the fediverse each user is a cost so when we find bad actors we simply eject them promptly.

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      Given that I, a massive prick, haven’t been banned for being a jovial massive prick, the false positive rate is incredibly low as well. There’s a sincere desire to produce a solidified, low stress community here. It’s pretty fantastic. And fairly unique in this ratfuck of a timeline we live in.

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        Correct, but the troll infested discourse in other places polarize everything on purpose to sow discord in society. In Real Life people really are better at voicing different opinions without it looking like pure hatred.

        • abbotsbury@lemmy.world
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          But you’re placing the entire lack of diverse opinions on the lack of trolls, which is wrong because it assigns all diverse opinions as troll opinions. Really I think you’re just answering a different question than OP asked to frame it as a positive for the fediverse, which doesn’t address the actual concerns. As you say, real life people are better at voicing different opinions, and this isn’t an ad-supported network, so where are the non-troll different opinions?

          I also gotta disagree with the idea that the fediverse is adverse to “user number go up!” mentality, the most common response to me saying a post is off topic or low quality or something is “it doesn’t matter because we need more content to attract more users!”

          • troed@fedia.io
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            There are plenty of diverse opinions here. You just don’t recognize them as such since they’re expressed respectfully instead of polarizing.

            • abbotsbury@lemmy.world
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              So is that your response to OP’s question then? They’re wrong about seemingly everyone agreeing because they are mistaking respect for agreement? They mention wanting to see dissenting opinions respectfully, so I don’t think that’s the case. They are talking about how the majority seems to be on the same wavelength, not that there is a lack of polarization. Again it seems like you have an answer to a question OP didn’t ask (“Why aren’t there more trolls and tribalism on the fediverse?”) because that’s what you want to talk about instead.

          • Valmond@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            Your first phrase says op places the Entire lack of diversity on the lack of trolls. That’s quite black and white view from your part IMO.

            Sometimes we have the tankie trolls here on lemmy too, and sometimes back in the day I had good discussions on reddit, nothing is usually 100% or 0% in those cases

            • abbotsbury@lemmy.world
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              Your first phrase says op places the Entire lack of diversity on the lack of trolls

              No, the person I replied to said that, they were replying to OP.

              That’s quite black and white view from your part IMO.

              If your answer to “where are the different opinions” is “no trolls,” then you are putting the lack of diversity on trolls. Which is black and white, yes, and why I disagree with it.

              Sometimes we have the tankie trolls here on lemmy too

              Which is why “no trolls” is a bad answer to OP’s question.

  • TaterTot@piefed.social
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    It’s not terribly surprising to find a lack of diversity in opinions here. The Fediverse, in general, is a fringe alternative to the big social media platforms. Using it is, in and of itself, an opinionated decision that we all more or less share.

    When people use Reddit, TikTok, or similar platforms, they go there to find their subset of culture. That’s the benefit of their scale. When you use Lemmy, the platform itself is your subset of culture.

    It’s very fair, and smart, to be skeptical of a one-sided consensus of opinions without adequate research. You will often see strawmen and a lack of understanding toward groups that disagree with the prevailing thoughts here. Never use only one source, and never trust a social media platform to give you the full picture.

    However, you also want to beware of the False Balance and Golden Mean fallacies. Diversity of opinions has no direct correlation with truth. If a topic is worth forming an opinion on, it’s worth doing real research on. Reading internet arguments will only reinforce bias.

    • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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      You will often see strawmen and a lack of understanding toward groups that disagree with the prevailing thoughts here.

      Like literally in this thread, including towards OP, although I don’t see anybody trying to be mean about it (yet).

      • TaterTot@piefed.social
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        Agreed. Though upon re-reading my point, I regret specifying “here”, as it might give the impression I think it is unique or more prevalent here than elsewhere.

        I think this is simply a common human trait that is found in all communities. Even surprisingly in debate and philosophy communities. I’ve been guilty of it without even noticing.

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          Oh yeah, it’s common as dirt. We do have a monoculture going here, though, and like anywhere those allow strawmen to kind of fester.

    • MrKoyun@lemmy.world
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      When you use Lemmy, the platform itself is your subset of a culture.

      Great way to put it!

    • fizzle@quokk.au
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      Diversity of opinions has no direct correlation with truth

      I often struggle with the concept of “truth”.

      Most politically contentious issues are contentious because there are are competing arguments all based on some genuine concern. Often its not a question of truth but rather perspective.

      • TaterTot@piefed.social
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        That’s a fair point. I could have used less definitive language. The concept of objective vs. relative truth, or even whether such a thing exists, is a philosophical discussion I didn’t mean to broach. And I certainly did not mean to imply there was a single correct opinion on all topics.

        I simply meant to summarize my concerns with equating diverse opinions with inherently healthy discourse. While many topics can, as you noted, have a plethora of valid opinions based on perspective, they can also have opinions simply meant to “poison the well,” as it were (or simply be wrong regardless of perspective). Climate change deniers being given equal time and weight on the news, for example.

        Perhaps it would have been better phrased: “Diversity of opinions has no direct correlation with accuracy, sincerity, factuality, or value.”

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    I agree with this opinion, lol.

    Lemmy is an echo chamber, even a comically specific one. Reddit had that reputation in the early days too, although Lemmy is dealing with the fact it’s a technical FOSS thing disproportionately certain people will appreciate, on top of it.

    I’m doing my part to get downvoted a lot. In the meanwhile, just keep touching grass and listening to people you disagree with. Especially if they disagree with you in a new and unexpected way. I’ll add looking at polling and demographics as well, since it’s the only way to identify which bubbles you’re in. Even IRL they’re impossible to escape totally.

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    No. I’m perfectly secure in my absolute hatred and rejection of bigotry and violence.

    • Phil_in_here@lemmy.ca
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      But, to be fair and balanced, have you considered the many pros of bigotry?

      It’s important for the discourse that you respect my position, no matter how dogshit it is or how poorly I defend it.

      /s

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    Lol, no. Where else am I going to hear from the proudly atheist, anarchist, socialist, not-mainstream-and-not-interested folks? Even folks on the outer edges from my own position, like hexbear and lemmygrad, educate in their own way: not so much about what they think but about why they believe what they do. That doesn’t mean I want to go roll my brain around in that full time, but I am absolutely better for having encountered them.

    I love these comments and opinions when I see them in the wild, and while I may completely disagree, when they are presented courteously they are fascinating and informative.

    This next bit is long, but relevant: it’s about getting yourself to a point where you are able to see and enjoy the diversity that is already here. Just my opinion, skip it if you want.

    You don’t have to agree with something to be able to read it. And you don’t have to possess, or even form, an opinion of your own just because others express theirs strongly. That need comes from innate human evolution, a deep quiet fear that if you stray too far from the pack or disagree too strongly you will be ostracized and not survive, but in the here and now in online spaces it’s just a fear. You can, within your own tolerances, choose to set that aside and just read whatever you want.

    Or to see it from the opposite direction, ALL people, including you, including me, derive comfort and security from being in agreement with the herd. But these days, in online spaces, and in every open space where public discourse occurs, that is no longer natural discourse, but a mindfuck: something manipulated beyond recognition by hooking into our primal human fears and using that subtly activated fear as a leash to drag people into thinking, and then doing, what they would otherwise not be inclined to think or do on their own.

    That’s what fucks it up for the rest of us. Propaganda, bad actors, and endless marketing. Remember how it was when the internet was young? That’s the difference between then and now: those three things weren’t there then, and the internet was a space as great as we could all make it. But they sure are there now. And if you’re human, you too are susceptible to it. I know I am.

    So you carefully choose your spaces, you make the effort to know and respect your own tolerances, you take the time to look up sources on your own, and you curate your own feed like your sanity depends on it, because it does.

    Some young person told me off many moons ago about how “all people [his] age are overwhelmed” and how he could not be held accountable for his own shitty behavior online because of his resultant “anxiety,” while at the same time absolutely refusing to curate his own intake. To me, he was drowning in a flood of negative, low-value content he refused to turn off or even slow.

    I feel bad for him because while it is absolutely true that everything, coming at all of us all the time, is a tsunami of mental and emotional overwhelm that never stops, he CAN easily take control of what he chooses to see, and choose to cut it off when it’s too much. No one’s going to do that for him. But I can choose to do that for myself, and I do.

    And that’s how I can easily read differing opinions without being threatened by them: they are just that. Opinions. Not even necessarily factual. When you get to that place, the world is your oyster, but it takes constant vigilance. Get lazy and you’re back to just doomscrolling the propagandized mainstream mental and emotional manipulations again.

    But hit that sweet spot in your own feed and viewing tolerances, and that’s when you can see and appreciate the diversity that is already thriving here. Instead of a glance and a discard in a world of one-line comments – what doomscrolling and social media are made of and count on – you can actually read, really read and not just skim, and recognize when something is worth more than five seconds or not. The more you actually read and don’t just skim, the better and faster you’ll become while still enjoying the pleasures that deep reads will bestow.

    People are still making ten course meals of real content, but most readers are still hanging out at the food trucks. Only you can find what you’re really looking for, but chances are excellent it’s already here and you’ve either trained yourself to look past it, or actively cut it off by blocking it because it was too much trouble to deal with (high noise to signal, bad actors or behaviors, poor moderation, spam, etc). Look again.

    I especially tip my hat to dbzer0 forcing new users to write a brief essay on anarchism just to sign up. I don’t know if they still do that, but their requirement made me think about something I already knew from the distant past that I had not thought about in years – Sacco and Vanzetti came to mind, though they are perhaps not the best example of real anarchism, lol – and given recent world events it has been a VAST personal relief to know that there is a huge, thriving set of alternative philosophies that are NOT just designed to move masses of people through orphan-crushing and value-extraction machines until we all die. (And that’s before you get to the scam that is politics in the US.)

    So yeah, I’ve learned more about grassroots populist movements and beliefs just browsing Lemmy in three years than I ever learned in the space of many decades prior, and I can honestly say that while my values have remained the same, my entire worldview has been transformed by quietly hearing and listening to others talk about their own, even when I did not agree.

    TL;DR: If you’re not seeing diversity, that’s a sign to carefully broaden your own scope and tweak your own viewing boundaries.

    • magnetosphere@fedia.io
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      1 month ago

      This next bit is long, but relevant:

      Very true. I also found it to be of refreshingly high quality!

        • ChunkMcHorkle@lemmy.world
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          Lol. No. I’m what AI trained on.

          Throughout history, there were people who read, and in reading, gained the ability to write. Look at my post history. (I looked at yours: it explains your stance perfectly.)

          Let me know when you get something that idea-diverse out of a machine that isn’t actually a list or start out as one.

    • nylo@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      1 month ago

      this was a long good read, I think I’ve done the same in terms of curating my online diet but with maybe an order of magnitude less intention lol

      thanks for writing it!

      in terms of db0 signups, I don’t remember there being a “short essay” but I was asked to share my beliefs and my favorite anarchist. so I’m not sure if they’ve changed what you’re referring to or if your memory of it is a bit off but it did get me thinking more than any other web sign up probably ever.

      i especially appreciate your recognition of the diversity that’s already here, I agree.

      • ChunkMcHorkle@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        It was several years ago so in regard to dbzer0 signups I bet it’s my memory, lol. Thank you for the correction!

      • db0@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        1 month ago

        We actually never asked to share beliefs. Just favorite anarchist/FOSS/pirate/tool and two small anti-LLM riddles

    • Valmond@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      I had to do the writeup to get on the DB0 instance, I even stayed I’m not an anarchist but I think it has interesting aspects, and they accepted me ☺️

    • TaterTot@piefed.social
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      Damn. That was, apropos to your themes, an excellent read. I’ve seen several comments here reference the shifted Overton window and how it offers a diversity distinct from larger, more mainstream platforms. But you really did a great job writing about the value a discerning eye can glean.

      I do have one gripe with your comment, however:

      People are still making ten course meals of real content, but most readers are still hanging out at the food trucks.

      I will not stand for this food truck slander! Food trucks are to the world of food what Lemmy is to the landscape of social media. They present an alternative starting point from which to derive ideas contrary to established conventions. I implore you: don’t pass them off as the culinary equivalent of doomscroll slop. Instead, recognize that a discerning connoisseur can find flavors driven by passion, unbound from convention!

      Okay, enough melodrama. Seriously though, I think your comment was the best-considered take on OP’s question.

  • 🇰 🌀 🇱 🇦 🇳 🇦 🇰 🇮 @pawb.social
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    I see plenty of diversity without adversity. But there are also just some opinions that are indefensible and the majority agrees that the people with those indefensible opinions shouldn’t be allowed at the table.

  • darthelmet@lemmy.world
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    I do see plenty of disagreements, especially in the political sphere. While people seem to generally lean left, there is a decent amount of variation in opinions within that space. Although since they all still generally align with the same goals, the disagreements only get so heated.

    For things like media (games, movies, etc) I see less, but for me I just don’t really feel the need to rain on anyone’s parade. If they like something I don’t like, whatever. I wouldn’t be shocked if a lot of people felt the same way.

    For tech stuff… we’re on a decentralized open source platform and a lot of the users came over from corporate social media. Of course most of us are skeptical of big tech developments. Occasionally some nuance gets lost, but I even see some of that show up. There are plenty of threads where the OP posts something based on a misunderstanding and the top comment is someone who (probably) knows more about the topic and can clarify things.

    Also like some others have said, a non-trivial amount of the arguing that happens on other sites is likely egged on by astroturfing and prioritized by algorithms designed to keep attention rather than promote healthy discussion.

    Also, there are some topics where the disagreements I have at least just don’t feel relevant enough to post. For example, with the AI thing. I generally agree with the sentiment of opposing the current AI implementations being pushed by big tech. The environmental impact makes it a non-starter even if the rest of it was good, but then there are issues with privacy, companies using AIs that aren’t good enough to accomplish the task to replace workers just to save some money regardless of the consequences, and the involvement these companies have with the MIC, etc.

    However, I do have some optimism for uses of AI in the future. I think it’s cool tech that has potential to do good things, it’s just that a) It’s not actually ready yet and b) Some of those things would only work if we lived in a fairer society. But… honestly what’s the point of interjecting this into a discussion about what’s CURRENTLY going on with AI? What does my hypothetical sci-fi automated luxury gay space communism have have to do with a thread about companies spying on us or switching workers for AI and hurting both the workers and the consumers? Nothing really. It’s only really relevant for a discussion about academic research on AI. So I don’t bring it up. Not because I feel I need to silence my dissent, but because I recognize that it doesn’t really serve any purpose in this context beyond potentially derailing the discussion.

    So overall, I’m not worried. While it would be nice to have some more people on the fediverse, I’m fine with the disagreements we do see and I don’t need to argue both sides with a Nazi or a bot. As long as mods don’t get too heavy handed about unreasonable stuff, it’s fine.

    • foodandart@lemmy.zip
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      …Also like some others have said, a non-trivial amount of the arguing that happens on other sites is likely egged on by astroturfing and prioritized by algorithms designed to keep attention rather than promote healthy discussion…

      Reddit in a nutshell and what got me permabanned there after 15 years…

    • Cethin@lemmy.zip
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      For things like media (games, movies, etc) I see less, but for me I just don’t really feel the need to rain on anyone’s parade. If they like something I don’t like, whatever. I wouldn’t be shocked if a lot of people felt the same way.

      I do feel the need to comment when someone dislikes something for what I think are bad reasons though. I saw a thread recently of someone who avoid roguelikes and soulslikes, but not because they tried them and don’t like them. They had an opinion of them that I think was wrong. (They thought soulslikes were difficult and designed to make people brag, and roguelikes were lacking content and used meta-progression to pad them out —which that’s the wrong term for the one with meta-progression, but whatever.)

      If someone likes something though, that’s fine. Unless they like it for particularly annoying reasons, I’m not going to comment or engage, besides maybe asking for more information. Everyone has different opinions. I like some weird games that a lot of people probably would hate, and that’s fine with me. It isn’t their concern.

  • sad_detective_man@sopuli.xyz
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    1 month ago

    Not really. I see diversity in the areas I think are healthy to have variety on. And the things that are missing are the things that made me leave other places where it seemed like I was the unwelcome one so…

    Nah. Still plenty of stuff here that challenges me and makes me go learn stuff. That is a low bar however ¯\(ツ)

  • drphungky@lemmy.world
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    Yes, this is an echo chamber. Yes, most things are very samey. You don’t see alternative opinions because this is a TINY community. Like crazy tiny. Lemmy has what, 60,000 active users? You know a ton of those are bots too. Even after a reddit exodus that site gets what, 2 million daily users*? So you’ve got a crazy small group but it’s also very similar in type of person who is here. It’s overwhelmingly educated middle aged men with a tech background or focus. So you’ve got a limited pool of opinions to draw on, and then EVEN if you do occasionally get a different opinion, even within that narrow band of experience it can get voted down or swarmed.

    Look, I only lurk here occasionally, and I see stuff I disagree with constantly. I see stuff in this thread I disagree with. But I don’t post about it because it’s not worth it. I also don’t have time to argue a minority opinion on the internet, and my life is better since I stopped doing that. And I guarantee I’m not alone. But I ASSURE you this is a bubble.

    …but if it makes you feel better though, most people live in bubbles. I have been lucky to grow up in a very different place than I live, and I’ve found that politically, most Americans absolutely talk past one another because they are incapable of understanding “the other side” because they’ve never truly talked to people on the other side or listened to them, much less lived with them and understood them. This isn’t enlightened centrist BS, I have a side I agree with, but I also don’t misrepresent the views of people I disagree with based on no actual knowledge. And with non politics it’s very similar - small groups beget small opinion spaces based on a small pool of experiences. Whether that’s cars or AI or Linux.

    We used to get exposed to people with different life experiences and opinions in so-called “third places”, and we don’t have them anymore. Way fewer people go to chuch and the middle of the road protestant mainline has been subsumed. Social clubs like the elks and masons are far less popular. 12% of the population doesn’t serve in the military with a socioeconomic cross-cut. Kids don’t even have malls, sports start specializations early, and the Internet, almost worst of all, has made it easier than ever to get a social fix consuming only content from those most like you or what is algorithmically fed to you.

    Anyway, things are bad, I do not have a solution, but I have a little bit of time and feel compelled to post when you are practically begging for unpopular opinions. So my unpopular opinion is holy shit is this place an echo chamber, and if you don’t feel that deep in your bones you need to immediately drive 2 hours outside of whatever city you live in and go to a pancake breakfast hosted by some local scout troop, go to some small town festival and talk to people, or hell go visit a church of a religion you don’t belong to. And don’t talk to people your own age, or same familial structure. Talk to someone who thinks voting is dumb. Talk to someone who doesn’t care which Linux distro you’re on because they don’t even HAVE a computer, they just have an iPad.

    …and yes, realistically you’re probably not gonna make a connection that way without moving somewhere, and I’m obviously being mostly flippant, but at least don’t turn on conservative tiktok or watch Fox News and expect that to be “the other side”. Experiencing a different bubble is “growth” I guess, but people aren’t the bubbles they live in, and actually talking to them is a way better way to understand WHY we disagree, not just how. Again, like I said, I don’t have real solutions on how to do that. I just have the answer to your question and yes this place is a bubble.

    *Note I’m pulling those numbers out of my ass, but I bet I’m close on orders of magnitude. And yes I know reddit is half bots too.

    • imjustmsk@lemmy.world
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      I’m new here, but I don’t think I will ever treat this place like the only place I come to - but treat it more like a subreddit or a community of people rather than a full fledged social media with diverse number of people.

      This place is fun I though.

  • BarneyPiccolo@lemmy.today
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    I don’t know what your talking about. I’m very active on Lemmy, precisely because there is a lot of actual debate.

    What I don’t get, that Reddit had a LOT of, is trolls, bots, novelty accounts, puns, and especially Russian Propaganda Farmers who are just showing up to argue for the sake of arguing.

    I also don’t get a lot of MAGA trolls. Debate is one thing, but anybody who is still sticking by MAGA at this point is a truly sick person, and I’d rather not have to engage with psychopaths, thank you. I don’t have anything good or polite to say to them, and they can’t be moved by logic or morality, so what’s the point? They just want to cause problems, because they think that’s entertaining.

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    I live in south currently and it feels like IRL is the echo chamber.

    I genuinely did not know there are americans actually opposed to Israel until I came to lemmy. And I especially did not know it was a big group.

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      When the mango came to KY the whole crowd stayed quiet even during times when people usually cheer (usually his middle school nicknames). The only time they cheered was when he said the words “epic fury” 🤦‍♂️

      Then a man threw a beer can at him and called him a Pedo

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      Do you not watch the news IRL? Pro-Palestinian protests have been in the headlines practically since the Hamas terrorist attacks on 10/7/23. I’m not sure how you’ve missed them.

  • Fraction9170@infosec.pub
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    One reason you’re noticing a homogeneity of opinions on here is the fact that Lemmy isn’t botted like larger social networks. Larger networks have bots farms pushing all sorts of narratives for various reasons, and the one thing they accel at is finding people to argue with.

    You are also certainly in a bubble on Lemmy. You have to know it exists and care enough to use it over other platforms. Most people choose the path of least resistance.

  • Owl@mander.xyz
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    This makes me worried that I’m in some sort of echo chamber

    You are. Just consider how small the amount of people knowing about lemmy is, now take the ones who are interested in it (over using something like reddit) and now pick the ones who are technically capable to register an account. Those are us, those who have gone through this selection process.