bedes: An icon of Bede from Pokemon, looking towards the camera. (bede2)
[personal profile] bedes
I see a lot of folks saying that they "block/mute and move on". Which is a good practice, and this post is not about knocking it. Instead it's asking, how exactly does one do that on Dreamwidth?

Per my understanding, there is no "blocking" on Dreamwidth. There's only banning someone from your account. Banning someone from your account doesn't, however, prevent the user from commenting on your community posts, prevent you from seeing their comments, nor does it even prevent you from seeing their posts from the communities you subscribe to. You can block anonymous comments, and enable selective comment screening, but, per my understanding, that's about it.

Is everyone and their mother just using the Dreamwidth Blocker Userscript, like myself? Or are there some other trick(s) that I don't know of?

(At the risk of going on a tangent: I know that it's a leftover from Livejournal, but the complete inability to preen your feed experience via blocking or muting someone is a serious turn-off for me. I really like Dreamwidth otherwise, but when "block and move on" and "curate your experience" has become, like, some of the core tenants of fandom, it's really annoying. I shouldn't need to download an extension that only sometimes works, just to not see upsetting darkfic on my feed. Because it's my feed! Let me remove the things I don't want to be there! Aarrrgh!!)

A longer post about The Current Events is in the works, and is gonna be published hopefully later today, but I just wanted to ask this question (and complain a little bit, because what are journals for if not that?).

Date: 2024-12-11 03:48 am (UTC)
volkameria: Britz (Fuga: Melodies) a bit nervous (pic#britz_nervous)
From: [personal profile] volkameria
So to the best of my understanding, you can block specific users from commenting on your journal, and block anonymous comments on your journal, but anything external to your journal doesn’t have anything like that. Blocking X user doesn’t mean X user can’t interact with you on Y user’s journal comments.

Honestly I have gotten around this mostly by heavily curating my reading page or straight up just not going online - I’m not going to follow someone who doesn’t use tags/content warnings even if I like their stuff, cuz there’s just some days I don’t wanna interact with certain subjects, you know?

I hope someone else knows more and can provide some more info or solutions!