Would it benefit the communities, or the public? Why should they be hidden?
As someone who is in their own niche communities (not on Lemmy) I suggest communities could have 3 modes: Standard, NSFW, and NSFL. If a community is marked NSFW or nsfl, it can never go back to Standard. If a community is marked NSFL, it can never be NSFW or Standard, or maybe if it does, all content from it is deleted.
Users could then set their preferences to standard, NSFW, or NSFL. If they choose NSFL, they see everything.
I don't really visit FOSS communities, however I have given my fair share of bug reports and feedback. (I'm a game programmer)
Most communities welcome the feedback. I know I can be blunt, or even out of line while reporting sometimes. I try to be the "asshole" before another person comes along without my experience who actually is an asshole and doesn't know what they're talking about.
It's also a minor test to see how they respond to rough feedback. I don't think anyone has mishandled it so far. They are always polite and respectful to customers, and I usually relax after the first encounter.
I try to make it clear that the feedback I give has importance (when i know what im talking about), or if its minor, i tell them its not a real issue, not worth fixing, etc. If they reject it, it stops there. More often than not, they are understanding.
I don't recall any blatant arrogance in any responses so far.
This is 1 of like 12 fruit stands going North towards San Francisco. I forget the area name.
It's NOT the engineers. It's the executives and corporate management that decides that. The engineers just get paid to implement it.
"I'll Prime Minister you"
"I'll prime meridian you"
"I'll post mortem you"
"I'll prima dona you"
"I'll Pringle Mingle you"
Relatable. I was relieved I wouldn't be doomscrolling anymore. Then i found Lemmy, which works as a doomscroll sometimes, ut also goes down or goes slow randomly, forcing me to do something else.
I've found that I'm also browsing (old-school) forums now to fill the time.
@Oka
@lemmy.ml