Is it possible to block communities by name? Or is there any workaround to do so?

Specifically I am not interested in .*Moe posts. So whenever a “SomethingMoe” pops up in my feed, I block that community. However, unlike most other communities, they seem to have a never ending source of permutations of their names. This can get very tiring, as blocking them makes the general feed contain less, but never any of these posts.

I guess I could write a script, which blocks any community with the regex /.*[Mm]oe.*/gm and run it periodically. But I am a lazy bugger and neither want to write the script nor run it semi-periodically.

  • Sterile_Technique@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    Keep doing what you’re doing. Took months, but blocking communities I’m not interested in finally did make a noticeable impact on All. Just hit a few at a time each visit.

      • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        Those all seem to be modded by the same two accounts with identical names…

        It’s going to be waaaaaay easier to just block their accounts, then to block all the weird communities they keep making.

        Stuff like this is very unlikely to have active communities, just unhinged moderates who spam their special interest constantly.

        Whats really fucking annoying is the guy who has accounts on 20 different instances and keeps making them to spam the same bullshit

        • Hoimo@ani.social
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          3 months ago

          11 of those comms are on ani.social, an anime-centric instance where it is totally legit to split “pictures of anime girls” into more specific comms. It’s not unhinged or spam at all, but if you don’t want to see anime, probably best to block ani.social tbh.

          I for one like to see all the moe on top of my local feed and not pushed down to page 5 of global.

  • Dethronatus Sapiens sp.@calckey.world
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    3 months ago

    @[email protected]

    If you’re using a browser (either desktop or some fork of Firefox on mobile) to use Lemmy, you can use uBlock Origin to hide certain content. On the plus side, this would work even when logged off from Lemmy or (in my case) without having a Lemmy account.

    In “my filters”, you can add rules such as:

     /.*lemmy.*.*/##.post-listing:has(.community-link:has-text("/^ich_iel/"))
    

    Explanation:
    - /.*lemmy.*.*/ is a regexp to match any domain containing the word “lemmy” (e.g. lemmy.cafe, lemmy.world).
    - ## denotes a CSS rule.
    - .post-listing:has(.community-link:has-text("/^ich_iel/")) is a set of nested CSS rules:
    - it filters for every .post-listing element…
    - having any .community-link element…
    - whose text content, in turn, would match the given regexp.

    In my case, /^ich_iel/, a text which starts by “ich_iel”, which is the name for a Lemmy community I’m not interested in, due to me not speaking German.

    You can use whatever regexp you need. You can also use multiple rules using this pattern to filter out multiple things. You can replace the .community-link with other CSS classes to filter out post titles, usernames, instances, anything goes.

  • tal@olio.cafe
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    3 months ago

    In general, I’d suggest browsing by “Subscribed” rather than “All”.

    First, “All” doesn’t actually show you everything out there, because your instance doesn’t know about everything out there. It only shows you communities that at least one user on your home instance (lemmy.cafe, for you) has subscribed to. You’re seeing content from communities on “.moe” TLDs because at least one user on your home instance is subscribing to those communities. On very large Threadiverse instances, like maybe lemmy.world, with many users, this is closer to seeing everything, since odds are better that someone on your home instance has subscribed to it. But it’s not everything.

    But secondly, I’ve seen a number of posts from people who invariably don’t like one type of content or another — yours isn’t one, to be fair — complaining that lemmy defaults should exclude X from the All feed, for some X, because they don’t like X and find it difficult to exclude X. And the problem is that there’s no global X that fits everyone.

    If you want to see everything out there, you’re probably going to want a script anyway. You’re probably going to want to pull down https://lemmyverse.net/communities or something similar — they spider the Threadiverse, and do actually build a list of all communities out there — which actually does list everything out there, then filter by whatever criteria you want, then subscribe to everything.

    • ToxicWaste@lemmy.cafeOP
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      3 months ago

      I like the “All” feed, as it allows some new content. My Subscriptions are somewhat smallish and mostly used for focused reading. I am just used to get rid of a certain topic with maybe up to 3 blocks (I don’t think there are many communities, which distribute over more than that many instances).

      You are absolutely right, trying to tell people what to post and consume online is an absolutely absurd idea. the trick is to figure out how to find your couple of topics.

      My current way of getting rid of unwanted topics is for sure not ideal. But most of the time it works just fine, when browsing randomly. Maybe i will get bored at some time and actually write a script. Thanks for the hint with https://lemmyverse.net/communities ! Hopefully i will remember to post the script here (if I ever get around to it) so others could profit from it. It seems like there might be a tiny audience for that :-)

      • tal@olio.cafe
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        3 months ago

        Long run, my thinking is that the best approach is to have something like “user curation lists” and let other users subscribe to them. Could be posts, users, communities or whatever. Then you find something that approximates your preferences, subscribe to “Bob’s community whitelist” and/or “Jim’s community blacklist”, and that reduces some of the human-time load to try to identify interesting content. My understanding is that BlueSky has something vaguely along these lines.

        But I think that there are probably more-immediate problems on the Lemmy/PieFed/Mbin developer plates right now, like dealing with the scraper-bots that are severely loading all of the instances that permit anonymous access.

    • Stillwater@sh.itjust.works
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      3 months ago

      I disagree. I exclusively browse /all and not subs for discovery of new communities. I would miss out on so much if I never used all. How else do you even find a community to sub to? I just manually block anything I dislike. I think it’s a better system than subs, personally.

      • tal@olio.cafe
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        3 months ago

        Hit lemmyverse.net, or check and see what people you talk to and find interesting are commenting in. Every subscription to a remote community had to start with at least one user on your home instance doing that.

        There’s also [email protected] and [email protected] (the latter specifically for those just starting out) that will have a list of communities actively seeking new users.