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andobando @lemmy.ml
Posts 0
Comments 6
Update from Lemmy after the Reddit blackout
  • He didn't speak in favor of it. Sources came up saying millions were being killed in Cambodia. Chosmky questioned the sources saying "where the fuck is this coming from? Nothing supports this". Thats his version of the story, yeah but hardly any evidence he supported Cambodia.

  • Update from Lemmy after the Reddit blackout
  • Nothing here says he's a fascist. His "genocide denial" stance stems mostly from the idea of being anti-capitalist and not trusting US-centric sources. Its not entirely without merit. Noam Chomsky for example is accused of the same thing for the Pol Pot genocide, though at the time he was right for the same reasons -- accusations started flying in the US based on completely banal sources.

    I used to be like this, its not entirely harmful. And in any case, I don't give a shit about his politics. We should be thinking about how to separate peoples politics from the platform, and the work hes done on Lemmy does exactly that.

  • What are you guys doing when there's multiple communities for the same thing across instances?
  • Right, I don't know if anyone would want to post in a super giant community like reddit. Your post just gets lost in the void, content gets completely dumbed dumb, and no one knows anyone because there is too many users. This was a huge of appeal of the old time forums which got killed with reddit. I think the internet is going to fundamentally change.

  • What are you guys doing when there's multiple communities for the same thing across instances?
  • Well you don't HAVE to go on every community to see what every single community says about something though. You can just have the couple communities you follow and check those. Likely there will just be a couple of big communities for each topic, not dozens. What might happen even is that you have certain instances specializing in certain topics. You might have left wing and right political instances for example, so you'd just check the 1-2 instances you follow.

    Each instance would effectively become analogous to the old time forums.

    Like I said though, there is also the possibility of merging content from different instances into a single page.

  • What are you guys doing when there's multiple communities for the same thing across instances?
  • I like the idea of different communities. A single giant "community" like reddit feels too big. Effectively no one can participate and the only content you see is the least common denominator. Ideally we'll continue to see at least a few popular instances and not just conglomerate back to one giant instance. I think what needs to happen though is a better integration of local vs federal instances. There should be a toggle within a certain community page to see versions from other instances. Or a way to merge multiple community posts together.