Put another way, what are some examples of software built with federation in mind from the start, rather than on top of a more centralized design?

  • @[email protected]
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    278 days ago

    My interpretation is something that isn’t the fediverse version of something else. Like Lemmy doesn’t count because it’s the fediverse version of Reddit.

    • vaguerant
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      98 days ago

      I think the question at that point is “How often is there a completely new way to use the Internet socially, either inside or outside of the federated space?”

      I don’t think it happens very often. Blogs, messsage boards and dating sites in the '90s; microblogs, photo and video sharing in the '00s; short form video sharing in the '10s if that counts as a separate thing. There’s only like seven types of social network in the three decades or so they’ve existed.

      • @[email protected]
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        58 days ago

        One major change that has happened is: forums used to be linear with thread bumping (phpBB, SMF), now they are mostly conversation trees with sorting by upvotes or similar (Reddit, Lemmy).