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- When posting a link to paywalled articles, we're now asking you to also link to an archived version of the article.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This rule is a result of the critical feedback we got on a few infographics that were not exactly wrong, but definitely outdated.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 — we'd be especially happy to have more mods with a feddit.org account, since mod queue federation is a bit lacking currently.
Even though I only speak English, I'm happy for foreign language articles/comments to be posted (as long as the language is correctly marked), is it mostly a moderation problem?
Are there actually equivalent communities for other languages around?
We have !europe@jlai.lu for content in French, and it seems that !europa@feddit.org is the same thing for german speaking content.
So far, I've mostly modded German comments here (which luckily is my mother tongue). It's a matter of common understanding, including with/among the mod team.
Idea: /c/Єurώpa, a community about Europe where everyone is free to speak whichever European language they feel like.
Expect Latin scholars to finally practice their language
Expect readers of Astérix to flex the proverbs they learned.
Dann, that sounds hot.
This is a neat idea!