If the descentralization of social networks continue, we will have to prepare for the eventual rise of the instances wars, where people will start to fight about which instance is better and which one is weird to be in and so on, but that’s for the future of us all.

  • @[email protected]
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    281 year ago

    One benefit that people don’t talk about enough is it naturally tends towards smaller community sizes than in a centralized system which is a better fit for our tribal human brains.

    We’re not great with speaking into a room with 1,000 people in it, much less a million.

    • DMmeYourNudes
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      121 year ago

      The problem is that it’s worse for keeping topics centralized and fragments communities for external reasons. It’s antithetical to the idea of a link aggregator where you centralize all of your news if you need to use several of them to make it work. Defederation should be a last resort to protect the admins from legal action, content manipulation, or brigading, not because beehaw thinks open signups harm their safe space. Making the internet a safe space is how we got to this point with Twitter/Google/meta/reddit, and everyone wants to do it all over again to rebuild their echo chambers.

      • @[email protected]
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        01 year ago

        Perhaps keeping topics de-centralized is a key part of keeping systems from turning tyrannical. That’s the theory behind the term “totalitarian”: that too much unification of thought produces behavioral restrictions, via the justification that if the truth of each topic is known and indisputable, then there’s no reason to share power in society as long as the person in power knows the One Truth.

        Centralized systems designed to uncover one clear answer, such as stack overflow, have every reason to fight against redundancy in answers. Anything rightly called a community though should not be built around the (totalitarian) idea that conversations are best centralized and made non-redundant.

        Big important questions need to be rehashed millions of times, not just covered once with millions of audience members.

        • DMmeYourNudes
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          11 year ago

          99% of the content people post and interact with doesn’t have a reason for multiple copies of it’s conversation to exist. Most content is consumed not discusses.

          • @[email protected]
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            01 year ago

            Yet when a person arrives and asks a question they are discussing. If they wanted to consume, the could.

            • DMmeYourNudes
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              11 year ago

              And the vast majority of the users consume the answers, not the discussion. They don’t ask the questions, hey look them up, and if no one asked, or no one answered, they can’t find anything and just give up. They don’t ask.

              • @[email protected]
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                01 year ago

                And some of them don’t even bother with trying to look it up. They just ask, because they like that method of getting information.

                • DMmeYourNudes
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                  11 year ago

                  Most communities do not like when people come in asking the same basic questions over and over again. I don’t think you understand how link aggregators work.

                  • @[email protected]
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                    1 year ago

                    I don’t think you understand how communities work. Conversations get repeated all the time in communities.

                    A community for determining the answer to each question once should be structured like stack exchange.

                    Reddit is a place for discussion.