Selfhosted
A place to share alternatives to popular online services that can be self-hosted without giving up privacy or locking you into a service you don't control.
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I don't get it. why are they deleting their posts?
It's just another type of advertising to them. Ask a question trying to solve a problem, then use your alt account to shill your own solution.
Doesn't work that way on lemmy: if they delete the post, then the alt's shilling disappears, too.
Frankly, I don't think users should have that power.
I'm not against it, post something it the wrong place, or during a bender. Would be kinda cool if lemmy tracked user starts on deletes like it does on posts and comments
I'm still undecided about their own text (deleting comments or post text disrupts the conversation but there's valid reasons), but I don't think the OP of a thread should have any control over the existence of that full comment thread.
Maybe some form of engagement or time limit would serve. If the post is empty or low engagement and less than 2 days old, it can go. After that it's up to mod?
Or just do it like reddit did, where you can delete your post content and remove your username from it, but the thread and comments remain.
Though with how the fediverse works, it's possible to spin up a custom instance that highlights deleted content instead of deleting it, meaning the attempt to get rid of it can be what brings it more attention if anyone has decided to do it. Just like with vote identities, they aren't anonymous and there are instances/sites that just show who voted for what.
I think it's more so that they can post the same thing frequently, hoping that it gets burned into peoples' brains.
I don't get it either, but it was also a big problem on Reddit for years.
On Reddit especially, it usually was people asking a question, then having their alt account respond with whatever they were trying to shill, and just doing that over and over again.
Because the moderators will ban them if they don't.
Can you expand on this? Why do you think this?