pyeri

joined 2 years ago
[–] pyeri 11 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) (1 children)

Also /r/technology and /r/programming went dark only after lot's of pressure from all sides and other subs.

[–] pyeri 47 points 2 years ago (4 children)

Two major subs called /r/technology and /r/programming just went dark. This seems to have reached great levels now considering that CEO /u/spez himself is a senior mod on /r/programming sub.

At this point, I think the most visited and interesting subs are already down on reddit, love to hear any exceptions which are still up and running.

[–] pyeri 5 points 2 years ago (2 children)

I don't think there is any cool down period, same thing happened when I tried to sign up on the lemmy programmers community earlier today. The thing is federation is far more complicated when you try to implement in code than what it appears. On top of that, when you try to impose generic standards to also accommodate Mastodon in the same network, the complexity goes up even several notches! It might take a while for all the bugs to get fixed and fediverse to become stable.

7
submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by pyeri to c/lemmyworld
 

As the other post suggests, reddit peeps are fleeing reddit as of now and trying to find refuge in other realms. One of my favorite subs /r/StallmanWasRight went dark all of a sudden yesterday, all content vanished and there is no idea when they'll return.

In this post, I'll try to list out a few minimal and "benevolent" sites where toxic corporate interests haven't managed to reach yet and a sane discussion could still be had. The Lemmy fediverse is the first choice, of course, but these are some other online instances who have managed to keep their watch towers lighted in these times of utmost despair:

  1. tildes: It's hands down another great network where good discussion can be had. They follow an "invite tree" system instead of allowing everyone and that keeps some check on the degradation of content quality. It also eases the job of the mod/admin a bit IMHO.
  2. hacker news: Another high quality content network mostly frequented by open minded techies and engineers. I suspect they've deliberately kept their html/css so shabby and kiddish so that the corporate crowd doesn't even bother to look inside!
  3. lobste.rs: Another good social network started by ruby and rails enthusiasts. They have stringent norms on who they take in and it's usually not easy to get an invite here unless you know someone closely on the network.

Special mentions to names like hubski, raddle, said it, indie hackers and slashdot. These also belong to the family of "simple and minimal" networks geared towards honest discussion, not unnecessary clutter and clunk. But I haven't visited any of them since a long time, anyone has an idea what's going on there?

[–] pyeri 4 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) (2 children)

What's the correlation with the IPO? Are they somehow pressurized so that IPO entry means they must get rid of third party integration and similar other feature changes?