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I mean a variety of opinions on stuff. "Diversity" can't be measured person-by-person, it has to be measured community-wise. If the community becomes a monoculture, that's a failure case.
Try to fix 'em! We have more tools available here and there's stuff we can do that was never possible on Reddit; in addition, we're not fighting a hostile admin team. We're certainly not guaranteed success, but we were guaranteed failure over there.
True. It's a hard problem to solve. Let me know if you come up with something good; I haven't yet. I'm not convinced this is the problem, though, because there's a lot of discussion that doesn't end in a dogpile.
Yeah, and I'd like to do that . . . but community choice is crucial here, because we'd want to focus on communities containing people that don't contribute to the monoculture. And the proposed solution here seems like it'd do the opposite.
In the end, we have many issues to deal with and limited time with which to deal with them. New user recruiting is important but right now it's not my primary concern. I'll rotate back to it, hopefully not too late.
If you want to propose a better solution I'm all ears, but I've explained why I don't think this solution is a good one.
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