this post was submitted on 23 Jul 2023
47 points (86.2% liked)
sh.itjust.works Main Community
7584 readers
3 users here now
Home of the sh.itjust.works instance.
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
not really, it would make some content very centralised which feels like against the idea of the fediverse.
But there could be some use cases like status reports of server but i dont really think it bothers people on other servers to see it.
Maybe for some chats of the server with the admins it could be useful but there i feel the matrix/mastodon/email option they offer is for that use case better, for the drawback of the need to change the platform.
I know that my POV is very negative about your idea so i would be happy about everyone arguing against me.
One use that I can think of is if the instance is for a small irl local community. There isn't much of a point for non locals to see banter or events happening within a small specific area.
there i can argue that people would get forced to be local on the server too for every village in the area who wants to "shut down themselfes".
But from your comment i got the idea that post/communities could be marked as "not all" where people still can subscribe or maybe have it in local but has the option to target less to no random people
I guess it would really depend how it is implemented. You do however seem to get the gist of what I was trying to say.
What if it's read only access instead?
kinda makes a very “us vs them” mentality though… seems like it could easily lead to people being required to have accounts on big instances, or ad supported instances having “premium content” or something like that: basically everything we want to avoid
Communities limited to local participation could still be perfectly visible to other instances. I don’t see many downsides.
The only question is, is there a point? Anyone can sign up and post, it’d just be a kind of rate-limiter for remote instances that don’t police their own sign-ups well