I don’t know if you’ve noticed this, but threads or comments about Lemmy or the Fediverse get downvoted a lot on Reddit and trolls who claim that it’s “dogshit” and “not going anywhere” get systematically upvoted.

Some of those trolls get then exposed when you ask them what Lemmy instance they tried and one of them with whom I had a surreal exchange answered with something like “yeah ofc I used Lemmy, this is the instance: join-lemmy.org 🤦‍♂️

It’s frustrating that these trolls keep contributing to the big lie that “Lemmy is not ready yet” and that there’s “no viable alternative to Reddit”.

This and the overwhelming number of comments being “against the mod protests” just prompts me to question whether there isn’t some brigading being organized straight from the Reddit HQ.

  • @Zebov
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    1171 year ago

    Probably bots. Reddit has been using them for some time, but recently got caught using chat gpt or something similar to argue against the blackouts.

      • GreatWhiteBuffalo41
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        101 year ago

        I’ve noticed this. A lot of people seem mad at the users and subs leaving, not so much the dumb CEO

    • Mon0
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      221 year ago

      The majority aren‘t bots. Most of them are legit no lifers to whom Reddit going down the drain would be a huge blow. I mean you work full time as a cashier for taco bell and you are not really happy with that situation. Some people go to school again, learn a skill… others spend all their time one Reddit stockpiling karma. Those are the people who really hate lemmy and anything that could remotely make Reddit worse, because they are heavily invested in the platform for the wrong reasons.

    • goinroguein10
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      181 year ago

      Do you have a source for this claim? I’m very interested in reading about it

    • @bloodtide
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      171 year ago

      Which is fking insane since one of Steve’s excuses for upping API pricing so high is to fight LLM from training on “their” dataset! Fucking LOL

      • it does make sense as a business strategy, since they probably have plans how to analyze the data themselves and sell that as a service or sell a more curated access than the current api.

        it’s certainly not about protecting the users data, but how to monetize it best.

        I also doubt them to have done the whole chatgpt bots just this week. Providing organic marketing where users are unsure if its just a regular comment of someone super happy with product xy or a bot.

        Shilling for certain products or political views is already sold as a service by quite a few companies. I think reddit just wants to take in that business.

  • @[email protected]
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    861 year ago

    Unfortunately there’s probably a large amount of users who simply don’t care.

    But that’s okay. What matters is content creators, not content consumers. Anyone with half a gram of decency and self integrity will have realized that they need to take steps to move away from Reddit.

    • YolkBrushWork402
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      261 year ago

      When the content creators leave and go to Lemmy/Kbin, eventually those content consumers will leave and go with them too. Will be a bonus for the Fediverse

      • @[email protected]
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        231 year ago

        We need to ask Louis Rossmann to join the fediverse. He’s been super critical with Reddit on YouTube.

        • @impulse
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          211 year ago

          I’m sure he’s already aware and will make an account if he wants to.

          There’s no point in shoving the Fediverse in someone’s face.

          • C_Spinoff
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            21 year ago

            Some slight reassurance never hurt anyone, that’s worlds from advertising or pushing though.

      • @iturnedintoanewt
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        71 year ago

        Dumb question… Sorry, what’s kbin? I’ve seen it mentioned together to Lemmy, but it’s all rather new to me.

        • Sparking
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          71 year ago

          It’s another piece of software that seeks to provide a federated experience similar to reddit. It is pretty cool! It also has pretty good support for browsing Lemmy instances, and Activity Pub messages that are . Definitely recommend checking it out. I think it can coexist very healthily alongside Lemmy.

        • @[email protected]
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          1 year ago

          Kbin, like Mastodon and Lemmy, is another way to interact with the fediverse through ActivityPub. Like Lemmy, it’s similar to reddit in style.

    • Br0da
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      61 year ago

      I care and I’m here. I count as do all of us! Fuck ‘em!

    • Houdini
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      41 year ago

      Exactly. Let the milquetoast mouth-breathers stay behind. With sufficient brain-drain, Reddit will eventually look like Quora.

  • @Extra_Cucumber_2979
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    791 year ago

    Once - unfortunately - Apollo app will be down, in less than 2 weeks, I’m pretty sure Lemmy will surge and they will come complaining here 😅

    • digitallyfree
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      91 year ago

      I’m already seeing an increase in trolling and spam across the Lemmy and Kbin instances. Hopefully the mods can handle the influx.

    • @airportline
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      1 year ago

      Maybe. It’s not like there’s a Lemmy app (for iOS) that’s as good as Apollo.

      • @FrullaPapaya
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        71 year ago

        Have you tried Jerboa for Lemmy? It is not Apollo but it is comfortable and ads free

        • @josephboyer
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          151 year ago

          Memmy is in TestFlight if you fancied being a tester.

          • @FlaxPicker
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            111 year ago

            Same with mlem. It’s a little ahead of memmy in development right now.

            • @avapa
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              131 year ago

              Mlem has become really good since they updated the app two days ago.

              • @ImDonaldDunn
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                61 year ago

                They really need to fix some of their accessibility issues. Comment text cannot be resized which makes it impossible for me to use the app. Memmy respects the dynamic text sizing in iOS, so I’m using it for now. It’s not up to feature parity with Mlem but the developer is doing a great job with adding features.

                • ddh
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                  11 year ago

                  Memmy also works natively on iPad. Mlem has just a zoomed iPhone version.

              • @[email protected]
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                21 year ago

                I hope they soon implement that proper dark mode, image zoom and search tool but yes since mlem the only reason i still open Apollo is to laugh seeing reddit burn :3

        • @airportline
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          151 year ago

          Jerboa is for Android. Apollo is for iOS.

        • Fredselfish
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          61 year ago

          What I am using for android and its not RIF but it is not bad and allows me to join this community on mobile which is how I use social media.

          I do constructive things on PC.

      • @handhookcardoor
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        41 year ago

        There’s Mlem and Lemmy, both are fine, just early in development. Both take heavy inspiration from Apollo, and work great.

    • @josephboyer
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      61 year ago

      I miss Apollo everyday. I haven’t used it since the blackout in solidarity.

  • @SterlingVapor
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    661 year ago

    Here’s the thing - we’ve been raised from birth to think “people don’t make things, companies do”.

    Most people have never used software that isn’t company branded, they’ve never sat in a chair made by someone they know, they’ve never pulled food out of the ground. Almost all jobs set someone up doing a service with a supply chain behind them or doing one small step of something bigger.

    It’s learned helplessness. They don’t have the concept of how they could do things outside of the hierarchy - solid chance they’ve tried, and since their skills are hyper-specialized and rely on big, expensive tools, they found they had a lot of gaps.

    Anything you do outside of a company is a hobby to most people. And even then, people organize into sports leagues and buy fancy toys instead of just meeting up in the park with a ball… Do you really need to play by professional rulesets when you’re just trying to exercise?

    This time around, I didn’t bother to explain why the decentralization is so important to my friends and family - even the technical ones are almost afraid of the idea of it.

    Instead, I told them about the ways Reddit has picked up the harmful strategy that Facebook used, and that makes mobile gaming so addicting yet so unfulfilling: show them less of the content they want to change the reward schedule, training you to use the app longer for a smaller dopamine hit. Show you content that will make you feel angry, driving up engagement. And most importantly, always wave the promise of another dopamine hit.

    The app is eggregious - it sprinkles in stuff from top communities I left a long time ago because they suck, it gives you suggestions for new communities and presents them like interaction from other users, and it sends you notifications to tempt you back in all the time.

    And this is just the beginning, it’s going to get a lot worse With all the other social networks eyeing their own strategies to squeeze their users, it’s going to suck across the board, and good luck trying to build relationships outside these platforms

    I think it’s important to remember we’re animals, and we’re not just trainable, we’re the most trainable by a large margin. The best of us have just a handful of moments where we see beyond our instincts and conditioning, and decide to train ourselves

    This project is important, because it can give us back communities small enough to get to know each other, while providing a larger forum for ideas, and with a design that can shrug off attempts to control it.

    It’s going to fragment. Sections of it will break off into echo chambers, admins will sell out their users, and parts will offer a curated walked garden hosted. But it can survive all that because of one simple truth - unless one person captures the majority of the network, they’re going to have to cut off the best part of the network. Social media can be profitable without sucking, but to rake in profits it has to suck - and even then, we can start up servers for friends and family, and rebuild the network organically

    I’m working for an app streamlined enough I can send it to my mom and have her sign up without getting scared off, and I think I’ve got a solid idea of how to improve discovery of communities without becoming distributed rather than decentralized. Other people are building their own visions of what this can become, and a lot of people are writing impressive code (Lemmy has no business scaling as well as it has), and the beauty of it is that it all competes while adding to the whole.

    I’ve been at it for 30 hours now, but I can’t shake the feeling that me getting this out this out in the next few days is going to matter if this is going to become what I hope instead of another shard of Reddit.

    But every time I step away to take a breather, I end up back on here and see a glimpse of what this could be

    The only way to change the world is to release something self-perpetuating and self-reinforcing and intrinsically positive, and hope it grows

  • @XanXic
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    641 year ago

    It’s sort of an asshole problem. All the cool people are walking away from Reddit, or at the very least trying to support the blackout/boycott. So all that’s left are the chronically online people, apathetic lurkers, and assholes who purposefully don’t care. The assholes are now seeming more vocal because all the logical voices are burned out or gone. Provided the good contributors/commenters stay away. Eventually lurkers won’t enjoy a ton of pissy comments on everything and look for more interesting discussion to peruse. Then the assholes will just be being assholes to each other, then be like man this place is full of assholes, and go look for a healthier community to be an asshole too because they don’t want people who fight back like they do lol.

    • @[email protected]
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      111 year ago

      Hey hey hey. I’m chronically online. That’s why I care enough to be here instead of Reddit!

      • @XanXic
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        31 year ago

        Lol same, I just meant the reddit addicts. Which I am one but I’m here. I’m trying lol

    • @Kroxx
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      91 year ago

      Honestly it’s pretty great this way, lemmy is most of what reddit was to me without all of those problematic groups you mentioned.

    • @BeMoreCareful
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      61 year ago

      Me who fits into all three of those categories: side-eye.png

    • @Something_Complex
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      1 year ago

      And it’s probably a lot of bits owned by trait to stop the migration

      Eddited: bots* owed by Reddit*

  • @Monkeyhog
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    601 year ago

    I haven’t noticed that because I no longer look at reddit. I suggest you do the same.

    • croobat
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      251 year ago

      Yeah, OP is getting hate-baited hard.

      • GreatWhiteBuffalo41
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        21 year ago

        Yeah I’ve seen a lot of it happening to everyone who participated in the blackout. I got death threats and shit in my inbox.

    • GreatWhiteBuffalo41
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      31 year ago

      I literally only use it for my sub these days because it has a fair amount of members. I do all my scrolling and reading here now. Login there to check the mod queue and I’m done until there’s an alert.

    • Ataraxia
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      21 year ago

      Yeah, I don’t care what happens on there.

  • croobat
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    471 year ago

    Dude, you are recommending Pepsi in a Coca-Cola forum.

      • @amcjv12
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        61 year ago

        Smh imagine not being a chad Pepsi enjoyer

          • @lemmein
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            41 year ago

            Now we’re talking. El Psy Kongroo

        • @SacredHeartAttack
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          31 year ago

          I dont know if we’re talking about internet or soda. I like Lemmy and I like Coke. shrugs

  • @[email protected]
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    451 year ago

    Lemmy isn’t ready yet to completely replace Reddit for most people, and that’s part of the fun!!

    • @IMongoose
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      281 year ago

      The thing is, there are pretty much two distinctly separate reddits, new and old. New reddit is flashy with live videos and more media than text, and old is very text based. And then if you are using an app like RIF, you don’t even have chat. For me, old reddit is very much like browser lemmy and going from RIF to Jerboa was very seemless. It’s almost the same thing. But if someone actually likes new reddit and their app(I saw a graph that like 80% of users use it) lemmy is not going to cut it.

      But imo lemmy is in a great spot right now. It could definitely be better but it’s growing a lot. I’m liking it at least.

      • @Paralda
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        31 year ago

        Agreed on Jerboa, but I wish navigation was a bit smoother. ``

    • @Something_Complex
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      131 year ago

      We are pretty of the first migration, one the land is settled more will come

  • smokinjoe
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    1 year ago

    Lmao, who cares what they think?

    But also, Lemmy isn’t ready, which isn’t a bad thing at all.

    What it is, is viable. And that should scare the shit out of reddit

    • @jpenczek
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      111 year ago

      My biggest issue with Lemmy is lack of userbase… which is fixable by signing up for Lemmy.

      Figured best case scenario other people make the switch, worst case I’ll forget this service even exists.

      Also does anyone know how to enable dark mode, or if there is a dark mode?

      • @Aztech
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        91 year ago

        I use jerboa for Android and it has TWO dark modes 😱

      • @Aurix
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        71 year ago

        There is a lot of activity to spend many hours here. Discover more communities here. There is a dark mode, go to the settings page. You will find it in a drop down menu.

      • @ImDonaldDunn
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        61 year ago

        Once there are good mobile apps in the app stores, I think we’ll start seeing a surge in adoption. The other big piece is moderation tools. If Lemmy can manage to build better mod tools than Reddit, it would be a big draw for power mods

      • Mintyytea
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        51 year ago

        yeah that’s what I’m struggling with too, like it’d be great if we could encourage people to try these, but at the same time I don’t want to give them a bad first impression to turn them off forever if they can not stand it’s still a baby project (understandable). I honestly don’t think it’s that hard to start using these fediverse products though, and I feel like the posts saying “lemmy will never take off”, “kbin is too hard to use” only gave me barriers to start using it. And then when I did start, I was like oh this is great, everyone’s talking, it’s a close community

        • moon_matter
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          51 year ago

          The biggest issue is how easily people are taken “off-site” when linking to another instance, leaving them essentially logged out and unable to subscribe or otherwise participate. Users should be presented an option to be redirected to the relative view within their instance or go external. With the “external” link in much smaller font below the preferred option. Kind of like how Steam or Discord has a pop-up asking if you “trust this site” whenever you leave their spaces.

          • Mintyytea
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            11 year ago

            Yeah I do agree with that. Like if I got some search results from google, and it came from lemmy.one, the link takes me to lemmy.one site, but I probably don’t have an account on specifically lemmy.one. Then I can’t make any comments, save/upvote. I’d have to navigate there again on my account’s server to be able to do anything

            • moon_matter
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              21 year ago

              If you’re coming from anywhere other than your home instance, that’s a slightly different problem that is unfortunately impossible to completely solve without a browser extension. Sites cannot access cookies from a different website for obvious security reasons. So the most another web site would be able to do is offer a drop down with a redirect to the most popular instances. It would work similar to third party social media sign-ins (e.g. sign in via google account).

              The problem with the fediverse is that they couldn’t possibly offer a full sign-in list, but maybe at worst you would have to type it in manually or rely on an extension.

    • I'm back on my BS 🤪
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      21 year ago

      Exactly! It’s like getting upset over what an ex thinks. That’s their problem. We’re focusing on ourselves.

  • @[email protected]
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    361 year ago

    Lemmy is pretty dense to a newcomer, especially one who is used to the centralized web. But that’s okay - we don’t need Lemmy to replace Reddit. Just like Mastodon, this ‘temporary exodus’ is only beneficial for this platform.

    Even when the drama ‘blows over’ and Reddit is back to its usual status, we will have gained a huge amount of new users interested in a decentralized web. As long as there are enough users for Lemmy, I think that’s okay.

    • @LizardKing15
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      251 year ago

      Being a niche place without a million American teenagers is better anyway.

      • @MBM
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        61 year ago

        Finally they no longer have the excuse that everything has to be about the US because it’s an American website :)

    • Khold
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      71 year ago

      Initially I was kinda lost, but now that Im getting the hang of the instances etc, its pretty cool

      • Sage the Lawyer
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        31 year ago

        And people forget that before we used reddit for years, we had to get used to how subreddits worked and how to curate them to make our feeds more personalized. That wasn’t any harder than figuring out instances here. The more you use a system, the easier navigating it becomes.

  • chiisana
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    361 year ago

    I think there’s truth to some of the “not ready” claims… and this is coming from someone who really tried to get into Lemmy, ended up creating their own instance (as demonstrated by my user handle).

    A few issues I think Lemmy dev team really need to address ASAP, from least technical (thus affecting most users) to more technical (this affecting less users) are:

    1. UX/Discoverability – Finding communities are a huge pain in the backend right now, and with multiple communities on different instances serving same purpose (i.e.: [email protected] and [email protected]). Sure, Reddit had same issues (the example I’ve heard is /r/meirl and /r/me_irl), but Reddit offered solution (multi on old reddit, community+community on new reddit). There must be a way to streamline it with meta-communities or lists on Lemmy such that the contents can be viewed in a unified fashion. I recommended !community@ (note the lack of domain) to streamline all of user’s subscriptions with same name on different instances as an example; and perhaps we can use #list$user@lemmy.domain for users’s maintained lists to unify !homelab@lemmy.ml, !datahoarder@lemmy.ml, !homelab@lemmy.world, etc.).

    2. Trigger happy defederation hubs – a certain instance has unceremoniously de-federated a couple of other larger instances. This is not the way, but here we are, with users on those instances not able to access the broader Fediverse, and vice versa. Until discoverability gets taken care of, it will be challenging for users to find a good home – this leads to next point:

    3. Authentication – The Fediverse at large needs to separate authentication out from instances. Instances may provide their own authentication, fine, but there needs to be better way to authenticate against something else other than an entire new instance of Lemmy. The ActivityPub protocol has clear definitions on what is an actor, and users shouldn’t need to deploy a Lemmy instance to identify themselves, separately from a Mastadon instance to identify themselves, separately from a… etc. This is because frankly…

    4. Deployment of Lemmy is utter garbage. The official documentation’s getting started guide gets users setup with an instance where the UI container cannot talk to public, but the lemmy backend can? Why bother shipping an nginx container if the backend will just expose itself to the whole wide net? Also, let’s just pretend postgres container isn’t open to the whole world with a basic password… Trying to get it up and running with Traefik was a pain, just do a quick Google and see how many people have asked and gave up, as well as how many different ways people have tried to go at it (something something xkcd 927; I’ve contributed to a new one of my own per linked post on top!), and the dev basically just straight up going ‘we don’t support traefik’… also, each approach is not without problems…

    5. Federation is a bitch. I am pretty proud of the way I’ve used override to not edit original docker compose, and locked my setup down a little. But, I’m not ready to have the instance open to the whole wide web without CloudFlare in front… but allegedly, Federation doesn’t work with CloudFlare… why? Good luck trying to get to even a popular sub’s scale without getting hit with DDOS when someone disagrees with something someone else posted.

    There’s many more problems, and I genuinely want Lemmy to work. But, Lemmy is, lack of better words, “not yet ready” for prime time. It is thrown into the spotlight with Mastadon (which feels a bit more mature, at least from reading the docs) because of bad leadership at mega techs… It will take a lot of work for Lemmy to evolve and mature, before it can be “ready” to really absorb the mass of Redditors leaving Reddit.

    • @[email protected]
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      71 year ago

      Regarding #2, I think not defederating might be an easier sell if users had the ability to block instances. Right not it’s just users and communities. Hate lemmygrad? You can block its communities one by one, but it’s kind of a pain. So instances only have the option of a full block.

      • chiisana
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        51 year ago

        Not a lot of value in singling any community out… I think if it keeps up, eventually, they will just flip to private instances and de-federate themselves away from the larger fediverse…

      • @[email protected]
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        41 year ago

        I have an account on beehaw and I wrote like three sentences and was accepted, I wrote the same thing here on lemmy.ml not being accepted is probably more of an attribute of you

      • @ShadyGrove
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        11 year ago

        They ask you to write a few sentences to prove you’re not a bot / troll. I wouldn’t consider that a lot of effort personally.

        Im honestly a bit confused why everyone is hating on beehaw though, isn’t the whole point of this distributed system is that we can control what we want and don’t want to see? There’s no one person controlling anything, so just move somewhere that’s more what you’re looking for or even start your own instance.

    • milkjug
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      51 year ago

      on #4, thank you for expressing how I felt. I’m not a novice at Docker, but each time I try to spin up my own instance I gave up halfway because of the poor documentation. And I have about 30 other dockers successfully running with reverse proxies, cloudflared proxies, DNS filters, etc. And for some reason I find the docker compose difficult to comprehend.

    • @Soltros
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      181 year ago

      Also, Lemmy is a great alternative, simply because regardless of the devs political views, literally anyone can fork it on GitHub, make Lemmy2, and link it up with OG Lemmy and Kbin.

    • @[email protected]
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      131 year ago

      I’d honestly be happy if the people who are swayed away from Lemmy for that reason stayed away from Lemmy. I don’t at all agree with the developer there and anyone who posts that kind of thing is gross. But anyone sensitive enough to take that as a reason to stay away from Lemmy is super annoying and I’m happy they aren’t here.

    • @[email protected]
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      111 year ago

      Reading the OP in that post argue physically hurts me, they just seem to be such an annoying person

    • @BeMoreCareful
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      41 year ago

      People forgetting Aaron Schwartz and JSTOR.

      Also, why do magnanimous people always seem to have leftist politics?

    • @[email protected]
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      41 year ago

      damn i clicked that link expected that the main dev is like a fashist or something…turns out he is a communist yay

    • GreenM
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      31 year ago

      WTH hell is that OP in that post doing with their life. Fighting everyone just for sake of having conflict.?

  • @[email protected]
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    211 year ago

    “Don’t attribute malice when you can attribute stupidity.”

    I would not be surprised at all if that user was not aware of which instance they opened or tried after opening join-lemmy.org. Many people are not very mindful or thorough or intentional in how they use technology or software or services. They probably do not even know what an instance is - and so linked the lemmy website.

    • @[email protected]
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      11 year ago

      It took seeing a “dummies guide to the fediverse” before I understood how Lemmy works. I gave up and looked for another option before that, and I’m relatively tech savvy. Or at least I was 10 years ago…

  • NRVulture
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    201 year ago

    Of course there’s no viable alternatives to Reddit. Why would someone create another dumpster fire?

    • Fredselfish
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      31 year ago

      Lol best comment right here. We don’t want to be Reddit we want to be our own thing.