If you don’t like what people share to the community, don’t click on it.
Comment on 55 Years Later, Star Trek Finally Fixed Its Weirdest Canon Quirk
DavidGA@lemmy.world 1 year ago
Don’t post these kind of shit clickbait headlines.
I have 10 reasons why not, and number 3 will shock you.
ValueSubtracted@startrek.website 1 year ago
FaceDeer@kbin.social 1 year ago
Indeed, I don't see why people clickbait on the Fediverse where there isn't even any advertising to be had. There's no benefit.
For those who want to know what's beyond the headline, this is about how in previous Star Trek shows we keep seeing humans defeat AIs by talking them down with their "human emotions" or "human element" always winning the day. But in the most recent episode of Lower Decks there's a bunch of "evil AIs" who are immune to that and instead sort their own shit out for themselves.
vidarh@lemmy.stad.social 1 year ago
I posted an article I found interesting, and I avoid editorialising titles. Clearly people here hated that, though I find the reaction pretty bizarre. Oh well, people like what they like.
FaceDeer@kbin.social 1 year ago
It was a good article, it's just the presentation. Unlike on Reddit you can include text with a link so perhaps a snippet of explanation like what I wrote would have helped.
Ferk@kbin.social 1 year ago
Personally, while I appreciate when people add a "snippet of explanation", I do prefer that to be in the comments.
Making it part of the submission can feel like editorializing.
This kind of approach encourages people to repost the same content multiple times just so they can post a different view on it in the "text snippet". And I think the comment section is a more suitable place for that, personally.
Fallofturkey@lemmy.world 1 year ago
Was an interesting read, thanks for sharing