This study investigates the presence of left-wing extremism on the Lemmygrad.ml instance of the decentralized social media platform Lemmy, from its launch in 2019 up to a month after the bans of the subreddits r/GenZedong and r/GenZhou.
We conduct a temporal analysis on Lemmygrad.ml’s user activity, with also measuring the degree of highly abusive or hateful content. Furthermore, we explore the content of their posts using a transformer-based topic modeling approach.
Our findings reveal a substantial increase in user activity and toxicity levels following the migration of these subreddits to Lemmygrad.ml.
We also identify posts that support authoritarian regimes, endorse the Russian invasion of Ukraine, and feature anti-Zionist and antisemitic content.
Overall, our findings contribute to a more nuanced understanding of political extremism within decentralized social networks and emphasize the necessity of analyzing both ends of the political spectrum in research.
The best part of being an academic yourself is that you stop seeing other academics as being automatically superior to people who could not enjoy their level of education.
You can get away with a lot of bullshit in academia.
Academia is mostly bullshit because the economic and social incentives require most professors to be self-promoting hucksters. And they are not punished for doing this, up to and including “light” plagiarism and all kinds of abuse towards students and employees, if they bring in grant money. Only crystal clear faking of results seems to impact such people and even then they seem to do all right in their next positions elsewhere.
But of course in unified Germany if you are a pharmacology researcher and a party member for apolitical reasons, you cannot be trusted and will not get to keep your job.
Turns out everyone I knew in college who failed classes because their papers were academically lazy and dishonest should’ve just kept going and they would’ve ended up with a career in writing articles about tankies