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lucas Lucas @lemmy.lucaslower.com
Posts 2
Comments 16
Pirates ain't scabs. This blackout is now indefinite!
  • 100%. It appears to me this new community is already serving the purpose of the old one!

  • Pirates ain't scabs. This blackout is now indefinite!
  • Never thought about how this relates to net neutrality. Reddit was kind of becoming a "common carrier" for information, but as a centralized source it's in their interest to filter content for money's sake. Here in the fediverse the communities (and their data) are cloned but constantly updated across many independently owned servers. So no one server owner can ever really steer the discourse. We just need an official way to migrate a community in the case an instance goes down/stops meeting the needs of the community.

  • Pirates ain't scabs. This blackout is now indefinite!
  • Exactly. Bring all that discussion and content over here, then we are actually in control of it. We can't expect anything to change when Reddit thinks there's no viable alternative.

  • Pirates ain't scabs. This blackout is now indefinite!
  • Nice. I think the Fediverse is the way to go for communities like this.

  • Just for today, I am NOT drinking! The Check-In thread.
  • Love to see this community here. IWNDWYT!

  • First active day on the fediverse after 11 years on Reddit, and liking it here!
  • I feel like that could lead to issues as well. The best way for the fediverse to work is users spread out across many small/medium instances.

  • First active day on the fediverse after 11 years on Reddit, and liking it here!
  • Certainly feels like there's some 'ignorance is bliss' to it. Folks don't want to hear something is an ad because it takes away the illusion that their feed is in their control. And they don't want to feel gullible.

  • Beatles Anthology series

    In case anyone is ever looking, the entire Anthology documentary series from 1995 is on archive.org. 9 hours of fun!

    1

    Beatles rule?

    2
    Be patient with the fediverse
  • Love that idea. Servers could distinguish if they want to be a general 'home instance' for users, and those that opt in could communicate with each other and push accounts around as necessary. Servers could calculate their likelihood to accept a new incoming account based on some heuristics the admin could set, with sensible defaults. That way the system would self-balance itself as new instances appear and as mature ones reach capacity. Of course for that to work there would have to be some central authority keeping track of account locations for login purposes.

  • Be patient with the fediverse
  • Spreading out is definitely the way to make this thing work. I'm sure there is more that can be implemented to help with federation speed, making sure you have all comments, etc. Those are solved with a monolith instance, but as we see you need a monster server to do it. I think instances averaging less than a few thousand users each will be the way to move forward.

  • Should I host my own instance if I don't intend to run a community?
  • I believe it is saved first on the instance you're signed up for, then gets pushed around the network using the Activity pub protocol. So it eventually ends up being stored across many instances of it has far enough reach.

  • Love the new icons
  • Mm, let's open these hexagon shaped icons. Nice hiss.

  • Reddit communities with millions of followers plan to extend the blackout indefinitely
  • This is the main issue I see right now as well. I created my own instance for my account to live on, just so I know it will be there as long as I want it to. But that doesn't do anything for communities I'm subscribed to that could, potentially, be on an instance that later goes down.

    I think communities of similar topics are going to need to coordinate in the long run, and perhaps run their own instance to house their communities. This way the folks running the community and the folks hosting it are one in the same. You'd have instances that mainly house users, and perhaps a community or two. That's where most folks would have their main account. Then you'd have instances that mainly house content, with few users besides the moderation/admin team(s).

  • What's your favorite internet "oldie"?
  • FML was the best. I had some app for it for android, not sure if it was the official one, but it was essentially just text and a few basic buttons. I could spend hours scrolling that thing.