• deweydecibel
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    51 year ago

    The problem is people that would be willing to run and moderate a sub on reddit are not all capable or willing to host an instance for that thing.

    • wjrii
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      31 year ago

      Yeah, I mean once it became clear the the Threadiverse would be populated by tens of thousands of self-exiles from Reddit who left for a bunch of issues, relatively few of them directly related to how federation should work (i.e. people like me), it was sort of bound to happen to any general interest instance.

      The Star Trek and the security instances (and even lemmygrad) are probably more how the model was envisioned. I’m not entirely sure it’s “better,” but it is better suited to the infrastructure that was in place.

      • deweydecibel
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        11 year ago

        Yeah a big part of the reason why this is happening is because the vast majority of people coming here don’t give a shit about federation they just want a version of Reddit that isn’t Reddit.

        I guarantee if another Reddit alternative starts growing that is centralized and more aligned with how reddit was, these people will leave for it.

        • wjrii
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          11 year ago

          I was on Squabbles for a bit when the API changes were looming. It was fine, I ran into nice folks, but more than the performance or the community, I was concerned that a single centralized site, run by one dude, who seemed determined to set it up to quickly monetize, was not going to be sustainable.

          I admit that federation was not why I came to Kbin, but if federated sites are where open-internet folks are sharing links and pics and discussing them, then that’s where I was headed. I suppose the good thing is that anyone who is deeply invested in federation working exactly how it was originally envisioned can continue to pursue that goal with their own instances, up to the point where they consider defederation with the (relative) normies.