Hi Lemmy! I’ve just uploaded a new version, and this is the changelog:

  • Community moderation tools: Lock comments, feature posts in community, ban users, remove posts/comments, appoint as mod. All this tools are available when visiting a thread.
  • View and resolve post/comment reports. There is a new moderation section available in the main menu (hamburger menu). It will show the new unresolved reports count.
  • Show if an user is mod, admin or bot (A, M and Bot) next to username.
  • Highlight moderator distinguished comments
  • Show community moderators in community sidebar
  • Set the default feed on app start from settings (Settings-General)
  • View cross-posts of a post. While visiting a post, tap the 🔀 icon to view a list of cross-posts
  • Cross-post a post to a different community (Post menu, Share, Cross-post)
  • Show new comments counter since last visit
  • Show if a link is already posted when creating a post, and where.
  • View your upvoted and downvoted posts in profile (Lemmy 0.19)
  • Bug fixes and improvements

https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.rubenmayayo.lemmy

Thanks to all of you supporting the development of the app. You are the best! ♥️

  • RubénOPM
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    211 months ago

    What’s the role of an admin? Can they moderate any community?

    • @UndercoverUlrikHD@programming.dev
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      11 months ago

      Depends on the instance and the community. I’m sure lemmy.world admins have a quite different workflow than smaller instances.

      For programming.dev, most of our work in regards to the community is removing spam/scams/CSAM and the occasional instance rule breaking post. A lot of our communities are also admin moderated due to lack of moderators. In those instance we have a placeholder moderater account and use our admin accounts to moderate.

      Speaking purely from a general lemmy standpoint, admins can do everything a moderator can do across every community. We can also view who votes and downvotes.

      Unique for admins is that we can ban users from the entire site, not just a community, purge a user from the database (includes every post and comment they’ve made) and purge posts. We can also choose to speak as a “moderater” which is similar to normal moderaters, only with an admin symbol instead.

      If the instance also require applications to be approved, we can see every application and approve/deny them.

      We also see every report that involves our instance, be it a report on local community, or a local user reporting something on a federated community.

    • Max-P
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      211 months ago

      Admins can do pretty much anything they want, but the rules of the fediverse will dictate if and how it propagates to other instances.

      So as an admin I can ban you from my instance and moderate your community however I want, but since my instance isn’t authorized to do those actions on your behalf or the community’s behalf, I would only see it from my instance perspective. Any lemmy.world admin can ban you globally, or moderate your community globally, since they host both your user account and community. If you’re a mod of a community on lemmy.ml, lemmy.world can ban your user account, but can only moderate their view of the lemmy.ml community as seen from lemmy.world, and lemmy.ml admins can moderate the community but not your account.

      From Boost’s perspective, you don’t care, an admin is effectively a moderator of everything and some more. I’m not sure the purge option is available to regular moderators, but admins have the option to completely nuke posts (usually used for CSAM and other stuff you really don’t want to exist on your server).

      If you’d like an admin account to play around, feel free to register on my instance and I’ll give you temporary admin.

      It’s also really easy to run locally with Docker as well, if you want to implement and test more admin stuff. But it’s mostly mod tools that matters, the rest is fairly mundane: manage site logo and name, sidebar, configuration options, federation settings, user signups approvals.