atomicpoet

joined 2 weeks ago
[–] [email protected] 1 points 5 minutes ago

See you're trying to mince words here but the point indeed does stand because microblog and community based engagement are wildly different from each other, and have wildly different expectations and stipulations.

I run an Akkoma server, which is a fork of Pleroma -- and I use a custom front end. I do not run it as a microblog but as a blog.

Using the power of Markdown, my posts have headings, bullet points, and emphasis.

And more importantly, I'm not limited to 500 characters.

I also have a Friendica account. Friendica is not a microblog but a Facebook-style macroblog. Just like Lemmy, it supports groups. It also supports galleries, events, and personal notes. It is not a microblog.

There is also Misskey. It has all those things but also cloud storage too.

I'm not mincing words. These are all services that have significantly diverged from Twitter-style microblogs to become something distinct and different. Many of these services have group functionality just like Lemmy. Hell, groups are on the road map for Mastodon -- but Mastodon development is super slow, so some people on Mastodon use guppe as a bolt-on feature (not intuitive at all).

The only thing that sets Lemmy, Mbin, and Piefed apart is that they're decidedly more Reddit-like than other services.

I don't really know how relevant that is considering that the competing platforms aren't federated to us.

What competing platforms are you talking about?

I never tried to say or imply it wasn't an option, because it is, but for big servers that contain more of the pie it's a bad idea.

And my point is, not necessarily. A server that proves toxic, no matter its size, eventually becomes defederated.

Personally, I don't think lemmy.world is in danger of this at the moment. Ruud seems to be an upstanding guy. I don't think he'll go the way of lemmy.ml. But still, I never take anything for granted.

The Fediverse absolutely is a platform whether you like it or not, a decentralized platform but a platform nonetheless.

A "platform" implies that a singular entity runs things, and they have final say on what is or is not allowable. This is not the case with the Fediverse. I can built whatever want with it, set up a server as I wish, with a wildly different UI/UX.

Now it really seems like you are misrepresenting my words here, trying to spin me as some anti-defederation troll. When the reality is I said that defederation of large servers and large communities has consequences.

Of course it has consequences. Nobody is arguing that. But in the context of the original post ("I don't like that a moderator uses lemmy.world, and I find that intolerable"), what's reasonable is defederation.

[–] [email protected] 8 points 1 hour ago (1 children)

Okay, for context, this means that Lemmy has gained 4.4K MAUs over last month.

Not bad.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 1 hour ago (3 children)

Hey, where are you getting these stats from? I ask because FediDB is down.

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

These are Mastodon server

Nope, only one server I mentioned is a Mastodon server.

Now you seem to think that defederation of lemmy.ml is a big gotcha though they aren't actually very large all instances considered

Actually, lemmy.world is not that big all things considered. It’s big for Lemmy, sure. But Lemmy isn’t that big at all.

Enter Beehaw.org. They defederated lemmy.world and sh.itjust.works back in 2023 during the first Reddit Migration.

Beehaw.org didn’t lose influence because they defederate the bigger servers. They lost influence because they took a heavy-handed approach to things. But if that’s how they want to run things—fine. No one owes anyone else federation.

This is kind of a stupid argument because if platforms or communities don't have any people in them creating content or replying, or voting, they don't really function at all as a social platform.

This is not a “platform”. It’s a software distribution for an open protocol. And how people choose to use that protocol is up to them.

If you want to federate with everyone, that’s fine. If you don’t, that’s fine too. No one is putting a gun to your head and telling you who or what to associate with.

But the fact is, defederation is an option. It’s always an option.

[–] [email protected] -2 points 2 hours ago (4 children)

The fact is that in the fediverse any server that has a significant IS to big to block, else userbase and interaction will suffer.

The second biggest Mastodon server is near universally defederated.

The biggest Pleroma server is also universally defederated.

You probably don’t know what these servers are, and that’s a good thing because the actual fact is defederating them improves the user experience for everyone else.

To say this isn't the case is to spread misinformation, as people who follow such advice will notice they have a much poorer Fediverse experience.

Until July 2023, the biggest Lemmy server was lemmy.ml. It has now found itself defederated by many servers. If lemmy.ml was too big to defederate, how did it find itself defederated?

The myth of “big server = undefederatable”—that is misinformation. Big servers find themselves defederated all the time. See also: Gab.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 4 hours ago

Here’s the link:

https://atomicpoet.org/@atomicpoet/posts/Ar1k52vf54XylLFsJM

To answer your question, Bookface is an alternative—and better—UI for Friendica. And Friendica is essentially a federated alternative to Facebook.

[–] [email protected] -3 points 5 hours ago (1 children)

Assuming good-faith effort, don't you think it's reasonable to publicly call out disingenuous, trollish behavior, especially with that sublemmy being one of the biggest ones across the FV?

Not at all. Trolls can be vindictive and litigious. Call-outs can result in swattings or long drawn out lawsuits.

The best way to deal with trolls is to quarantine them. That is, minimize their reach.

Consider that we don't have the same mechanisms across the FV as exist on Reddit, such that other means of correcting (evidently) terrible decisions (such as making a huge troll a mod on a big community) need to be explored at the very least. I.e., sometimes I think it doesn't help in the end to run away from this kind of problem, and none of us should really want LW to drift towards an abomination such as HexBear, right?

I assume that all servers can be compromised -- even the "good" ones. Which is why you should always consider an escape hatch. And federation itself is that escape hatch.

LW is not so big that it is immune to defederation. It's not even among the top 10 servers on the Social Web either by MAUs or total users. And you don't even need a big server to be seen. I'm on a small server (atomicpoet.org), and from my experience, it's a lot easier to be seen on the Fediverse when you run things yourself.

But "bigness" is also a reason to build more Fediverse servers and redundant communities that exist on those other servers.

 

In desktop mode, this is what #Bookface looks like on friendica.world. Now Friendica world does not support Bookface out of the box, but you can enable this anyway, through your web browser. Here’s ...

[–] [email protected] -5 points 6 hours ago (5 children)

OP's problem is with LW allowing a certain person they don't like to become moderator of the server. They could block the user, but their issue is that the specific user has power in an LW community.

If OP doesn't like that, and feels like that moderators presence is a non-negotiable, she has options.

[–] [email protected] 9 points 7 hours ago

You don't need to wait on Mastodon to do it.

Obviously, I'm not talking about you specifically -- Threadiverse devs generally.

For example, some of this functionality already exists on Friendica.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 7 hours ago (1 children)

Right now, you can crosspost to a Friendica group by mentioning the group actor handle (ex: @[email protected]. And because Friendica supports quoted boosts, you can boost to a Friendica group through this method.

Lemmy could easily support this feature.

 

Now, why is it super unlikely that you’ve played this game? Because it was only ever released in arcades. And it wasn’t exactly a huge runaway success. But in terms of actual gameplay mechanics, this game had some monumental firsts.

 
 

r/RetroGaming is very strict about retro. They say the Nintendo 64 is retro while the PlayStation 2 is modern. This despite the fact the PlayStation 2 is now 25 years old.

So I got to wonder about this community deems as “retro”.

Or a better question: what’s considered retro and not retro? What’s the fine line between retro and modern?

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