I’m seeing a lot of users on my preferred instance with <1yr old accounts, that have thousands of posts and comments. Whether these accounts are people with nothing better to do than post mindlessly 24/7, or are bots pushing some narrative, it doesn’t make a difference, I’d rather not see what they’re posting, because chances are, it’s hogwash. It would be nice to be able to filter out these highly active accounts, based on a set variable of max posts per day, and/or comments per day. Any account that exceeds that variable is filtered out, and any account below it is allowed.
Does anyone have insight on whether or not this sort of filtering is possible to achieve on Lemmy? Is anyone else interested in having this sort of functionality?
Edit: I’m not trying to throw shade on active users. I appreciate active users. I’m looking to block users with AI image generated profile photos and have on average 10+ posts per day and 20+ comments per day. Those accounts seem suspicious to me.
There aren’t that many of us (1 year account on @Blaze@sopuli.xyz ).
Keep in mind that we could just be trying to keep the platform active, not pushing any agenda. 1000 posts in a year is 3 posts per day, so does not require 24/7 posting
Was gonna say, I’m sat on 2.2k comments apparently in about 15 months, which is surprising to me given I probably only comment on about half the days in any given week.
I will say compared to Reddit though, I tend to be more likely to comment here because there’re fewer people here and I want it to feel active enough for more people to continue joining (either lemmy in general, or just on smaller communities that don’t have a lot of activity yet).
I will say compared to Reddit though, I tend to be more likely to comment here because there’re fewer people here …
And the ratio of bots to humans on reddit is crazy high. There’s a lot less garbage to wade through here.
Then you check what quality content OP is posting and… 5 comments and this post. So they’re doing their part.
Lurkers who post this stuff bug me. Wanting a stream of content but are so nitpicky about it, when all they have to do is start posting stuff themselves to kick up conversations
It shows me 93 comments and 2 posts for me. It probably just hasn’t federated to your instance yet.
I just realised I have 3. 9K comments in just one year.
Seems like I have 1.6K since I came here in March - that’s 7 months. It would equate to 2.7K if I kept it up at this rate for a whole year.
Ah, if only kbin.social hadn’t gone done, I would too be post 1-year mark. I replaced that one with my own instance, but that makes me look younger than I should be…
We’re just trying to build an active community here, nothing else, really.
Also you made me realise i have 5.5k comment, seems like i’m a bit chronically online :/
In all fairness, most people with these accounts are the first migrators that keep the platform alive, if you block people that do push agendas (linkerbaan) it should be a good option instead of blocking everyone with a “older” account or a more active account.
I think there’s a lot of high-quality content coming from a few impressively active users on here. I wouldn’t want to be without it. Then again, each to their own.
But it seems wiser to me to just block whoever bothers you.
I tried that route and you gonna be disappointed at how empty the place is without them since you wont see their posts which rack up the comments.
A handleful of dedicated posters really keeping this place alive.
This isn’t hard to do. I share the skepticism of some of the other users that this simple algorithm is going to give you a good feed, but I can probably knock up a quick script that can do this for you, if you want.
Afaik, there’s no apps that do that. You’re likely just going to have to block individual accounts
Being real though, I often have more than 20 comments a day. It really isn’t that difficult to rack up if you’re bored and have the time. I’m not much of a poster, but 10 a day isn’t too far outside of feasibility for a person that’s into memery. So you’d end up filtering out people that would likely be good to have access to over time, even if it’s rare. If you do figure out a way to do it, might want to bump your threshold up a little.
This feels like something that would be scriptable using Lemmy’s API - see https://lemmy.readme.io to view and demo the endpoints.
Thank you!
I think that it would be theoretically possible with a modified client. But in practice you’d filter a lot of genuinely active users out, and still let a lot of those suspicious accounts in. Sadly I think that blocking them individually is a better approach, even if a bit more laborious.
On a lighter note, this sort of user isn’t a big deal here in Lemmy. It’s simply more efficient to manipulate a larger userbase, like Twitter or Reddit.
You can block them and over time it should get better, or you can write a script that does some checks and blocks them for you.
If you can program you can probably create an instance and then a moderation bot that bans people with more then X comments or Y posts a day. maybe that would increase the average quality of content. sounds like an interesting experiment.
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