Hello from the mod team!
First of all: Thanks to all members on their behaviors. You've been great! Please keep that spirit.
At the same time, we'd like to announce that we have updated the rules for this community, based on experience gained, recent events, and your feedback.
What's new?
The following is a summary, along with some reasoning. The full rules are in the sidebar of the community, as always. :)
- We are clarifying that this is an English-language community. If you create a post linking to a non-English source, please provide a full-text (automated) translation. This rule is a result of existing moderation practice where we already deleted some stray non-English comments and asked for the translation of a foreign-language link. (Nonetheless, we do love all European languages.)
- When posting a link to paywalled articles, we're now asking you to also link to an archived version of the article.
- Infographics must now include a source and a date (year). This rule is a result of the critical feedback we got on a few infographics that were not exactly wrong, but definitely outdated.
- We are clarifiying the rules regarding acceptable behavior in discussion: be kind & argue in good faith. These rules more or less explicitly lay out existing moderation practice.
Finally: Want to join the mod team? Please apply โ we'd be especially happy to have more mods with a feddit.org account, since mod queue federation is a bit lacking currently.
Sorry, for linking some non English articles. I got some feedback from other community that it is fine (even thanked me for it, that it makes the content more diverse).
I like what @tymoty@f.cz does, he tries to make multilingual conversation about eu and other stuff on his blog and mastodon.
I think a diversity of sources is absolutely great, especially since there's no reason to believe English speaking media to be particularly good at covering Europe.
Personally I'd rather use the built-in translation in FireFox rather than Google translate, if possible.
Maybe an idea could be to tag non-English content (title [language]), and to provide a machine translated link in the body of the post?
The issue with that is it is extremely browser-dependent. Hence asking for the submitter to include a translation.
Yeah, I misread the rules as asking the link to be to a translated version, which is not what they say. So I think this is a good solution. And I think people are right to encourage non-English sources. :)
@plactagonic Hi. I am an English version of @tymoty ๐
Thank you for your kind reference to my activities. If you get more involved, it would be even better ๐
If you are a link between that English speaking community and our hybrid communication community, it would be very nice ๐
@bobojp @federalreverse @Pierrette @xChaos
No reason to apologize! It is indeed great to have content that is non-English in the original. And you're also right, being stuck with British/American sources + Euronews and Euractiv isn't the best situation.
So your efforts are definutely appreciated.
Loads of interesting news are covered only nationally. What I linked was really fresh and probably not interesting for foreign media but because it was related to earlier post that got some traction I just linked what I found.
Skimmed over it, doesn't look like the European hypetrain I've gotten to know yurop. But it's also not a sub solely about Russian propaganda, so ... Looking good, I guess.