Fediverse Blocklists: Moderation in Noncapitalist Social Media

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.31269/3s4fqf49

Keywords:

content moderation, blocklists, alternative social media, fediverse, prefiguration

Abstract

Content moderation is a key form of labour on social media. While much of the scholarly attention has been given to paid or voluntary content moderation on corporate social media, this paper draws attention to content moderation on noncapitalist, alternative social media. Specifically, it focuses on the use of shared instance blocklists on the fediverse, a noncentralised network of community-run social media sites. The paper draws on critical analysis of the act of listing, which finds that listing is an administrative and moral act that introduces three problems: lists don’t carry their own selection criteria, they are binary, and they can grow. However, listing also produces knowledge. Drawing on this literature as well as participant observation and interviews, the paper explores how fediverse blocklist developers attempt to mitigate the problems of lists while also generating knowledge about content moderation in noncapitalist social media.

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Author Biography

  • Robert W Gehl, York University

    Robert W. Gehl is a Fulbright scholar and award-winning author whose research focuses on contemporary communication technologies. He received his PhD in Cultural Studies from George Mason University in 2010. Before joining York University as an Ontario Research Chair of Digital Governance for Social Justice, he previously held an endowed research chair at Louisiana Tech. He has published over two dozen articles in journals such as New Media & Society, Communication Theory, Social Media + Society, and Media, Culture and Society. His books include Reverse Engineering Social Media, which won the Nancy Baym Book Award from the Association of Internet Researchers, Weaving the Dark Web, and Social Engineering, published in 2022 by MIT Press. He also has published a co-edited collection of essays, Socialbots and Their Friends.

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Published

2025-09-20

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Section

Articles