For me, it’s equivalent to a statement that “I would like to see more of something like this”. That sometimes means upvoting things that I don’t agree with, yet very often I’ll pass over things that I do (such as “^This” - I agree, but don’t want to see more of it:-). Often I’ll upvote nearly every comment in a thread, to signal hopes for increased participation. To me it’s a signal for health and vibrancy of a community to see such.
But other people I guess use it as an “I agree” or “like” button? If that’s you, do you use it sparingly? What’s the rationale there - that when it is delivered, it means more? But with Lemmy so small, why not deliver it more often to help it grow? I mean you feel free to do you, I’m just curious. Maybe you feel it could encourage “karma farming”?
I’d even like to ask lurkers what they think, although I suppose that literally by definition I cannot:-). Then again, I recently became a lurker myself by watching the embedded Loops videos at https://tesseract.dubvee.org/c/loops@midwest.social, and I really miss being able to comment or vote on videos to help guide others to which ones I feel are most/least worthwhile to watch. It feels like a finger is missing - I reach out to do my normal activity and it’s gone.:-) So perhaps if someone was recently a lurker, what are your thoughts too?
Could it have gone somewhere else? Yes. But it could also go here - it’s not required to be “specific”, just “relevant”.
Also, USA cultural values do legitimately tend to differ from others - e.g. we say “supercalifragilisticexpialidocious” when we mean merely “great” (oh wait, no, that’s the other country that starts with a U…:-P), or in general try to “spin” things in a more positive light. Which is not always good. But it does feel welcoming, if that makes any sense?
I have an idea for an experiment: would you like to crosspost this somewhere else, perhaps AskLemmy, and we can see how the results may differ there?
I feel like the regular community members - FAR more so than mere mods and even admins - are the ones who create a sense of “community”. Upvotes and comments make it what it is, regardless of the rules, e.g. just try saying that you like a Mac (or worse, WINDOZE) in a Linux community.:-P (Theoretically someone can like whatever they like according to the “rules”? But in practice, downvotes and angry responses will chase those people away - good riddance!?! - while upvotes and and positive comments will reinforce the
echo chamber effectsense of “community”).I have no idea what country you are talking about nor what you were trying to say in that needlessly long response.
But as a Linux user you’ve offended me slightly, which I blow out of off proportion now.
So as a non us citizen, European actually, and Linux user I wish you good night, sir!