• Coelacanth@feddit.nu
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    4 days ago

    Tbh I kinda agree with this comment:

    I’ve said it before, we need the lowest possible barrier to entry possible if we are to be successful at attracting users in greater numbers, especially casual ones (which are desperately needed here).

    • Blaze (he/him) @lemmy.dbzer0.comOP
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      4 days ago

      I was surprised by the comment about contrast, knowing that the /r/blind community switched to Lemmy.

      Just had a look at what https://rblind.com/ looks like. Hm, yeah, definitely different.

      About the double input for password, Google still uses it, so it seems to still be an industry standard

      • Coelacanth@feddit.nu
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        4 days ago

        Confirm password fields reduces conversion rates. Google has such a chokehold on the market that I doubt they care about that and might be more interested in potentially reducing password reset traffic after miss typed password inputs. Though in fairness I think it’s doubtful if there is even a benefit in that area from having confirm password fields. At least if you have a proper unmasking or “show password” option while registering.

    • Alphane Moon@lemmy.world
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      4 days ago

      I have always done copy/paste for password confirmations. “Yes” and “confirm” is new for me, I haven’t heard of such inputs. 🤣🥃

  • Sjmarf@lemmy.ml
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    4 days ago

    Mlem dev here. Mlem shows this warning for instances that require registration applications to be approved first (which, these days, is all instances).

    The aim here was to make it clear to users that they won’t be able to use their account immediately after signing up - otherwise, users may be confused that they can’t log in. I do agree that it’s a little scary though… we’ll think about some ways to tone it down. I’m open to suggestions for better wording.

    I wasn’t aware that lemmy.world automated their process. It’s possible that we could provide a different UI for certain instances that use similar systems, but we’d have to hard-code each case which isn’t ideal.

    The ability to sign up in Mlem was only added a month ago - before that, we directed users to the web browser to sign up. Our current implementation leaves much to be desired, but is more user-friendly than requiring the user to visit a website. I’m planning to make some improvements to the system in future. I was reading this Lemmy post the other day, which I think has some good ideas.

    Here’s an overview of our current sign-up flow, fyi:

    Click to expand

    When the user first opens the app, there is no full-screen onboarding flow. They are not asked to choose an instance - instead, they are connected as a guest to lemmy.world. This avoids scaring the user away with the concept of “instances” before they have the chance to see any content. Here’s the first thing the user sees:

    If the user taps “sign up”, they are shown a list of instances ranked by their score on lemmyverse.net. This is one of the areas that I think needs the most improvement - we don’t currently tell the user what an instance actually is, and the way that instances are sorted means that most users probably choose Lemmy.world, which isn’t ideal.

    And finally when the user taps on an instance they get shown the page you’ve already seen a screenshot of:

  • db0@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    4 days ago

    Reddit has the benefit of being closed source and therefore having secret anti spam filters. We don’t have that benefit and therefore the new user registrations need to be rigorous. “frictionless registrations” also means thousands of spam bots. Reddit doesn’t require any but the downside is that they ban your account at the drop of a hat if they as much as suspect you’re a spammer or bot. However it does leave their registration appearing “simple”.

    • Draconic NEO@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      2 days ago

      Reddit has the benefit of being closed source and therefore having secret anti spam filters. We don’t have that benefit and therefore the new user registrations need to be rigorous.

      This is a bs argument considering that instances can and indeed a few already do maintain similar automated anti-spam and auto-moderation tools. The droves of instances that choose to function as clubs with application process aren’t doing it that way because it’s the only way, they’re doing it because they want to or don’t understand how to set up automoderation tools.

      Reddit doesn’t require any but the downside is that they ban your account at the drop of a hat if they as much as suspect you’re a spammer or bot. However it does leave their registration appearing “simple”.

      That is true, and it does seem to be a problem on instances that use aggressive automod like sh.itjust.works, though it does streamline the process by going from preemptively trying to deem people unworthy to punishing and cleaning out the ones who cause trouble (give or take a few false positives). People don’t have to be worried they won’t be rejected if all they want to do is look at memes, upvote, and laugh (we shouldn’t expect more from them on a Reddit alternative).

      • db0@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        2 days ago

        The droves of instances that choose to function as clubs with application process aren’t doing it that way because it’s the only way, they’re doing it because they want to or don’t understand how to set up automoderation tools.

        Pray tell, what experience do you have hosting lemmy instances or even social media websites to speak with such authority?

        People don’t have to be worried they won’t be rejected if all they want to do is look at memes, upvote, and laugh

        People can get banned for the wrong types of memes and for bad voting patterns in lemmy

        • Draconic NEO@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          2 days ago

          People can get banned for the wrong types of memes and for bad voting patterns in lemmy

          I’m not sure how bad the false positive rate is on instances like sh.itjust.works and lemmings.world, though from what I’ve heard it’s nowhere near as bad as Reddit’s false positive rate (which is probably a lot of intentional checks for arbitrary censorship).

        • Draconic NEO@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          2 days ago

          Why? It’s true and if the Lemmy Devs themselves aren’t even aware of the existence of effective auto-moderation on the Fediverse I’m not going to assume anyone else is either. People aren’t exactly bragging about or advertising auto-moderation tools on Lemmy so it’s understandable they’d be less known about and also less deployed.

            • Draconic NEO@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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              2 days ago

              It’s a more charitable interpretation than to assume they’re doing an intentional appeal to futility, or are pushing for the gatekeeping aspect of application based signup processes. Unfortunately both are very common tactics when other people discuss the manual approval club vs. automod spam removal debate.

              Note, when I say gatekeeping I’m talking about the people who say that they want it because they don’t want people in the fediverse who will “laugh and upvote” and spew some garbage about people needing to put in effort to join lemmy, you know, the usual elitism that has held Lemmy and Fediverse platforms back for a long time.

              • Blaze (he/him) @lemmy.dbzer0.comOP
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                2 days ago

                I just texted you on Matrix to invite you to the Lemmy Defense HQ channel

                It’s quite interesting to see how many spam accounts admins have to remove even with their automated tools enabled.

                Dbzer0 isn’t a generalist instance, and doesn’t want or have to be.

                The big 3 I posted above are good enough to welcome new joiners looking for a generalist instance with a minimalist application process. Lemm.ee especially now being the default for both Photon and Voyager is definitely getting most of the new comers

  • coldsideofyourpillow@lemmy.cafe
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    4 days ago

    There’s no way to revert the warning, at least without forking the app. Also, I’d expect most people to accept the idea applications once you tell the purpose (to fight bots).