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Joined 16 天前
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Cake day: 2026年2月16日

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  • It’s funny watching this argument.

    I’m from a very hippy community.

    I’m a collectivist.

    I’m extremely far left & progressive.

    I’m wholly anti-fascist.

    I’m also 100% in agreement with you regarding including differing opinions regardless of how extreme.

    Inclusivity only brodens the divide and limits opportunities for people who harbor extremist views to be influenced toward developing more balanced, functional, and beneficial perspectives.

    Moderation can be used to soften their influences in our commuty while including them allows our community to influence them.


  • ‘You people’ is typically defined by the attached action. ‘You people’ are the people who actually do that thing, whatever it is.

    If you don’t do it, ‘you people’ is not you.

    If you do do it, ‘you people’ is you.

    The point is not about ‘who’, it’s an oppositional statement about the ‘what’, the action, and implies it’s bad, or more importantly that the speaker doesn’t approve.

    Like: ‘You people, always with the child raping.’

    If you don’t rape children, ‘you people’ isn’t you.

    But also, the speaker is implying that child raping is bad, or something they don’t approve of, and something they don’t do.





  • I don’t expect it to bring change, but that wasn’t a rant. Neither was the OP.

    And, besides, a responsible developer wouldn’t be on ‘unpopularopinion’ policing the language of the complaints made by their basic apps users either.

    So I suppose we’re going to remain at this expected impass indefinitely. Because…

    I’ve been in customer service my whole adult life. Every product, whether service, or app, or device, will see mostly complaints as their primary feedback.

    It is simply human nature for a person to not mention a thing that works well vs actually act or speak out in response to issues that they encounter.

    A lot of the time the customer is going to be frustrated while doing that, and that will be reflected in their tone and language. And that should be expected, and thus allowed.

    It is in the best interest of manufacturers and producers and service providers to look to those complaints intentionally for resources to improve their products or services. And to do so with the knowledge and acceptance that their customers are possibly pissed off, frustrated, drunk, speakers of another language, or, and this is the most important one, not professionals in the relevant field.

    Are you a professional developer? If so maybe you know how to use GitHub, or even what it is. Not everyone downloading a social media app on Play is going to know any of that, nor should they have to learn about it to complain when they have an issue.

    This is a small platform made of primarily open source tools as a service to humanity by mostly good meaning folk. Inclusivity is important. And that means being accepting and welcoming to the less tech savvy. And understanding of their frustration when they have tech issues.

    So, if you or any dev or service provider or manufacturer of any sort wants to thrive, I suggest learning to listen more, and police your customers less. They don’t tend to respond well to that, especially if they are already frustrated or disappointed because of something you are responsible for.

    It’s a topsy tervy world where a customer has to concern themselves with a business opinion of them rather than the other way around.

    And even if the service provided is free, or just a pet project, it’s still being produced and provided in a world where these things are true.

    Regardless, I’ve migrated away from Blorp and will no longer be recommending it’s use. I’m actually going to be recommending against it. And who knows, maybe I am somebody, maybe me recommending a app tends to lead to mass adoption? It’s hard to tell.



  • Yeah, stop with that BS and pretend you’re a developer and not an emotionally immature grade school student.

    In their complaint they mention specific issues, be an adult and identify those for yourself.

    If they are problems you can resolve add them to your own to-do list, cause that’s what responsible adults do, if they aren’t problems you can solve then dismiss the complaint, cause they aren’t relevant to you.

    You aren’t gonna come off like some rock star developer disregarding complaints about bugs in your software by getting defensive and specifically choosing to ignore an issue cause you don’t like the person presenting it or the service they are using to do so.

    Grow the fuck up!