@RedtheBean the main text of the post should work fine for a screenreader (it can get messed up if the client is written badly but people with screenreaders can find a client that is built more accessibly). I'm just referring to the image alt text which needs to be written manually. when a screen reader comes across an image without alt text it will just say "image" or sometimes it will say the filename which can be super distracting.
there are tools to auto analyze images and try to describe them with AI, and some screenreaders have those tools built in, but it's not very reliable compared to the original poster describing the image.
@RedtheBean I'm not sure I understand your question sorry. do you mean that people write alt text that is maybe worse than what an automated process could produce? I have seen that happen, sometimes people will just write "meme image" or something like that which doesn't provide much information. but the best manually written alt text is interesting to read on its own, like how people might describe something on a podcast or the radio. here's a good example I found on the silentsunday hashtag - https://socel.net/@KarenKasparArt/111516496292833774
@ellesaurus > by stating you can in fact be both trans and belong on a blocklist, and that those accusations are part of a racist harassment campaign
This is the strawman but it's not really the argument. The argument has consistently been, for those trans servers which *do not belong* on the blocklist, why does no one care that they are there? because of transmisogyny, like @bri_seven laid out.
and why, when trans women admins ask why they were incorrectly placed on the list, is that seen as evidence that they do actually belong there? without really much concern about who that might harm or what kind of systemic misogyny is being enacted with that kind of response.
@Adam_Cadmon1 are we even getting a booster this year? I heard rumors yes in the fall. I wonder if anyone will get it or if it will be launched secretly like the bivalent was
@victor@jdp23@Velveteen I've heard from many people now that allowlist based federation is too finicky and would require too much work (much more work than blocklists).
I wonder if a basic greylist approach would cover much of this problem. Any time a server encounters a new instance that's not known, it automatically discards any media attachments, until there's been some admin review. Or maybe even some automation like, until more folks on the server follow accounts there or interact with posts.
at the risk of sounding flippant, I’m noticing a pattern from media reports on fedi.
‘Mastodon is too difficult to understand, users bounce off and leave for greener pastures’
fedi continues to grow
‘Mastodon is racist, is chasing away users’
fedi continues to grow, including many people of color
‘Um, well, fedi is actually sexist, there are no women there’
fedi continues to grow, including many women (seems like most of my feed is women)
‘reporter becoming increasingly desperate No actually actually, fedi is full of CSAM, and when we surveyed, we found that most of the posts were abuse images’
I’m not saying none of these things are issues. This network does have a problem with being confusing for new people, and at times racist, and at times sexist. there are a lot of servers on the underbelly that are dealing in terrible things and need to be walled off.
That’s not why they are making the reports though. they feel threatened that there’s growing interest in a platform without ads that’s outside of capitalist control, and they are trying every single angle to sow division and stop people from looking into it. That’s why the reports never dive into an honest comparison to other platforms (CSAM on Twitter was a huge problem for years and years. I’ve read it’s gotten better but I’m not going to try to verify that. and I won’t even get into the racism and sexism on Twitter.)
I’ve definitely been disturbed that I needed to set up a big blocklist to keep these people out of my server, there’s an important conversation to be had about what more we can do, and how to make this network safer. That conversation is not going to come from the Washington Post though, I’m sure of that.