this post was submitted on 15 Jun 2023
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Moving to: m/AskMbin!

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### We are moving! **Join us in our new journey as we take a new direction towards the future for this community at mbin, find our new community here and read this post to know more about why we are moving. Thank you and we hope to see you there!**

founded 1 year ago
 

So I've gone with kbin over lemmy for now, folks seem pretty friendly here.

Main question:
I understand that the point of the Fediverse is (relatively) easy access to decentralized communities. But what happens if the folks in charge of an instance decide they want to close it?

If ernest suddenly decides he wants to close kbin, is all the content just lost? Do we have ways to migrate the content/users/everything?

Even the reddit blackout was noticeably "someone else says you can't have this anymore" so I'm a little more sensitive to this than normal lol.

I realize we're in the early stages of the Fediverse, so it may just be a matter of patience while the smart people figure it out lol. But instance-death or long-term community-blackout seems like a risk across the whole fediverse!

Followup question:
If I post content, should I be basically spreading it across several instances to ensure my contributions aren't lost when someone else closes up shop?

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[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

They seem to be the same thing really. If someone was subscribed to all three of those subreddits, they'd see things tripled just as someone subscribed to the different communities here. I can think of possible fixes like checksums to weed out duplicates, but honestly that's a lot of work so you don't have to ignore a copy of something. Better idea is to use upvotes(favorites) to pick which community you see it first in or think it best fits in. Then the less popular one overall will drop lower.

I do not think we should restrict the flow of content, only be able to control what we see as the end user. Let them post things wherever, and let the communities determine what should be seen more, seen less, or removed if it gets to that case. And just like recent posts about not lurking and contributing, so must users be more proactive in directing what is best and worse in content, and reporting what is definitely not a fit. It's hard, I'm bad about it too, but if you read something and remotely appreciate it, click it up.