this post was submitted on 22 Jun 2023
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Lemmy has multiplied it's number of users (maybe more accurately accounts) in just few days. How much do you think is the percentage of bot accounts? Is Lemmy having problem with bot farming?

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[–] june 5 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (3 children)

Others don’t realise you don’t need to have an account on an instance to access it lol.

this, i think, is going to be the biggest hurdle for getting people to join the fediverse. we need seamless ways to view and subscribe to magazines on other instances than our own. either that or we need one to get big enough that it simply eats the smaller instances.

Edit: the last bit is a joke y’all: https://youtu.be/-06ki92PyVY

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

we need one to get big enough that it eats the smaller instances

but that would defeat the point, would it not?

[–] june 1 points 1 year ago

It’s a joke and reference to futurama: https://youtu.be/-06ki92PyVY

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

You had me right up until that last bit - As it is I'd argue there's too much centralization. For one thing, people underestimate the technical considerations of hosting a reddit sized social media service. Once you reach a certain point, just moving to a bigger server isn't sufficient. Also there's the money issue of a single instance hosting all of lemmy.

But even more so than all that, the decentralization is the whole point of the fediverse.if all of lemmy was on one instance, we'd pretty much just be right where we were with Reddit, at the mercy of whoever owns that instance. When things are properly decentralized, if an instance owner goes on a power trip, it's users can simply migrate away, and there would be plenty of other instances of equal size with lots of content. If one instance ate all the others, you'd have to rebuild from scratch if you moved

[–] june 2 points 1 year ago

It’s a futurama reference and a joke: https://youtu.be/-06ki92PyVY

I’ve never had this joke not land before lol

[–] [email protected] 0 points 1 year ago

You had me right up until that last bit - As it is I'd argue there's too much centralization. For one thing, people underestimate the technical considerations of hosting a reddit sized social media service. Once you reach a certain point, just moving to a bigger server isn't sufficient. Also there's the money issue of a single instance hosting all of lemmy.

But even more so than all that, the decentralization is the whole point of the fediverse.if all of lemmy was on one instance, we'd pretty much just be right where we were with Reddit, at the mercy of whoever owns that instance. When things are properly decentralized, if an instance owner goes on a power trip, it's users can simply migrate away, and there would be plenty of other instances of equal size with lots of content. If one instance ate all the others, you'd have to rebuild from scratch if you moved