• @Rob
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    11 months ago

    One thing that’ll need serious consideration:

    I feel like it’s inevitable that Lemmy will get an advertisement module that admins can enable. Alternative monetisation methods can also work, such as subscriptions. But users will have to realise that servers aren’t free.

    If you’re an admin for a small community and are willing to carry the burden: great. If you’re hosting a community that can support itself by donations: also great. But sooner or later we’ll need some ways to make servers sustainable.

    (Not a fan of advertisements and would prefer to be a paying user, but as Lemmy takes off we shouldn’t look down on admins trying to mitigate their expenses).

    Edit: sorry if you saw this comment two or three times, posting can still be a bit buggy…

    • croobat
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      11 months ago

      I will tell this nonstop, online advertisement (as a form of monetization) is pretty damn dated nowadays. You could give them literally a dollar every year and they would make more from you than serving you ads.

      Unpopular opinion: I kinda feel like a reason ads are so popular nowadays is because it gives the user a way of feeling they are supporting a product/creator by doing pretty much nothing.

      • @Rob
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        1011 months ago

        I think pitching in a dollar every year is preferable. Heck, I even pay much more to Youtube to get rid of advertisements. But it does pose a significant threshold for new users.

        A hybrid model doesn’t sound too bad to me, where you can pay for an ad free server.

        • @cucumberbob
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          311 months ago

          Get a VPN to India or Turkey (there are likely a bunch of other countries too). It’s a lot cheaper: I pay around £1.50 (RS129) a month

        • @scrux
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          211 months ago

          They could do an annual fund drive, I’d gladly pitch in a few bucks

      • @Freesoftwareenjoyer
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        11 months ago

        They are popular, because it’s a way to squeeze out extra money out of the users (often in addition to paying for the product) and since the software is proprietary the users often can’t do anything about it.

        Btw notice how most youtubers turned into salesmen that want to sell you something in each video and their sponsored segments are often minutes long.

      • @[email protected]
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        11 months ago

        The ad industry is really secretive in general. There aren’t many studies proving that targeted advertising even works. If the data was even slightly in the ad industry’s favor, they’d release it. Their entire job is spinning things to look good.

        I suspect that targeted advertising was invented to justify the existence of advertising companies as middlemen. Take for example the ExplainXKCD wiki. They just serve their own ads which are usually for tech products trying to reach Sysadmins. If every company did this, the ad industry would wilt.

    • CaptainBlagbird
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      11 months ago

      I’m thinking about creating my own personal instance hosted on maybe a RasPi or something, just for myself. It would cost very little (RasPi and Domain name are already laying around unused…).

      It might not be the fastest, and if my internet is down then the instance won’t be available (but then again I’d be the only one using it anyway).

      But I’m still trying to figure out other pros/cons with that approach.

      Edit: Here is a nice write up on why this might not be the best idea…

        • @[email protected]
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          11 months ago

          Thanks, I have another question: what kind of web hosting tier do you need in order to have the functionality needed to host an instance? I was fiddling with infinityfree and found that there are all sorts of minor functionality you need beyond just a catchy name in a domain that won’t have a bad reputation to host an instance. I mean, besides electricity costs, labour and some old hardware you have lying around to use as a server, how much is that hosting expected to cost?

          • @foggenbooty
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            1511 months ago

            If you wanted to self host Lemmy is very lightweight. The general consensus is you could get a cheap virtual host for $5-10/mo

            That would cover yourself and a few friends. Now, if Lemmy were to really get popular your database would grow in size so youay have to get more storage later but it’s overall very inexpensive to do it yourself.

            That said, major instances like Lemmy.world could charge their users $1-2/mo and probably be fine (this is napkin math). Long story short nothing is free, even if it’s relatively inexpensive. We need to create a community that is willing to pitch in a few cents for freedom. I don’t think that’s too much to ask, otherwise the ad model comes into play and the place goes to shit.

            • @rms1990
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              111 months ago

              I’m OK if it becomes a paid service and can block robots and spiders.

          • °˖✧ ipha ✧˖°
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            1211 months ago

            Beehaw was running on a 96€/month VPS and temporarly upped it to 336$/month to handle the reddit implosion.

        • @Laif
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          211 months ago

          That sounds unstable and unreliable.

    • @MasterKitty
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      1311 months ago

      I fully support that idea. Nothing comes free and as a lemmy.world user I’m using lemmy.world resources to browse lemmy.ml pr whatever. It’s only fair that I fund this server to do it’s work in some way.

      As long as we aren’t charged for getting the content itself.

    • @Freesoftwareenjoyer
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      11 months ago

      I don’t understand why people think it’s necessary. Does Firefox display ads? Blender? GNU/Linux operating system? VLC video player?

      No offense, but I think maybe you are so used to corporations trying to drain your money that you don’t notice how much amazing software we are using that was built for free. And this software is often better than the commercial competition (for example it took Microsoft 10-15 years to add workspaces to Windows and tabs to file explorer after they were added in GNU/Linux and it took them over 20 years to add a package manager).

      Not only was that software made for free, but it also gives users freedom unlike (usually) the commercial alternatives.

      • 𝓣𝓞𝓑𝓘𝓝
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        711 months ago

        Something that makes forums a bit different is that it costs the owners when people use the website. Unlike Blender, Firefox, Linux, etc… A server host can’t just make the forum available, then set and forget it, they either have to pay a huge fee to some host like AWS, or have a huge stockpile of computers in their basement.

        • @Freesoftwareenjoyer
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          11 months ago

          Perhaps you are right. They also have server costs, but maybe they aren’t as big. But other federated networks exist: Mastodon, Matrix and PeerTube. I don’t think they have ads, so Lemmy should be able to at least reach their size without them. I can’t say what would happen when it reaches a billion users though.

          On the other hand the costs will be distributed among many instance owners, so I don’t know why ads would be needed. We can have thousands of instances for example.

          • 𝓣𝓞𝓑𝓘𝓝
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            211 months ago

            Yeah, I think by default Lemmy shouldn’t have ads, but if instance owners want to add them to pay for server costs it makes sense.

            Though if they can survive off of donations, I agree that it’s way better that way.

          • TheSaneWriter
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            211 months ago

            Lemmy is the second largest federated platform, falling only behind Mastodon, and even still is nowhere near the size of Reddit. As it grows, the costs for the instance owners will grow too. Would you be open to a subscription model, where costs to run an instance are split between the members via a direct fee?

            • @Freesoftwareenjoyer
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              111 months ago

              I thought Matrix was also bigger than Lemmy, but didn’t see their numbers. Yes, I would be open to paying a small monthly donation or hosting a small instance.

        • @[email protected]
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          111 months ago

          How do you think Blender, Firefox, Linux, etc, are distributed? Probably get more requests per day than any single Lemmy instance does.

      • Troy
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        511 months ago

        Back in 2008 I met a bunch of the VLC devs at a KDE related open source software conference. They talked about their experiences getting approached by companies with “fuck you” levels of money with offers they couldn’t refuse – and yet refused. In 2008 it was about bundling spyware with installers, largely. I always admired their stalwart refusal to bend.

        Side note: this was shortly after they’d completed their transition to Qt as their toolkit. They stole their little volume control widget from KDE’s media player, Amarok. The beauty of open-source and cross pollenation. I expect Lemmy and kbin and others in the fediverse will freely cross pollenate too. In the end, open source wins.

        • @Freesoftwareenjoyer
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          111 months ago

          Awesome! I think I read about that somewhere. Such people are my heroes. Not everything has to be made for profit and so many amazing things were made possible by the Free Software movement, which is all about user freedom, not money.

          I understand why people are worried about the future of the Fediverse, but I feel like their standards might be too low when it comes to software. It would be better to have to watch ads here than doing the same on Reddit, but I really think we can do better than this.

      • @funkyb
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        511 months ago

        The difference is you cited software projects, not hosted infrastructure. A person can contribute to a FOSS dev project and not incur expenses dependent on end-users activity. Hosting a fediverse application isn’t like that, somebody has to pay for the hosting and the hosting expenses will scale with user activity.

        • @Freesoftwareenjoyer
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          The projects I mentioned weren’t made for profit, but they are now so important that they are funded through donations. Both from users and corporate sponsors. With that money they are able to hire full-time developers. So they still cost our society money, but no ads or spyware is required. I think hosting could work the same way.

      • @rms1990
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        111 months ago

        The difference is that it’s a hosted platform. This might an issue and if making it a pay only service doesn’t come around, ads will. If that happens I’m outta here.

        • @Freesoftwareenjoyer
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          111 months ago

          Lemmy’s development was funded by the EU. They see a value in decentralized platforms. So perhaps they or some other organizations or corporations will be willing to donate money or servers to Lemmy instances. We should probably look into how Mastodon is doing this.

          • @rms1990
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            211 months ago

            I know here in Canada that will never happen. Lemmy is just an interm solution for me until I can find something that can run in a terminal

    • @scarabic
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      1011 months ago

      Just having ads is not a problem.

    • epicspongee [they/them or he/him]
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      1011 months ago

      I think people really overestimate how much stuff like this costs relative to how much users are willing to spend. My 1.5k user Mastodon instance costs roughly $100/mo for managed hosting. I set up a donation portal on OpenCollective and got fiscally hosted by the Open Collective Foundation (giving us 501©(3) status).

      Overnight we got one-time donations covering more than six to eight months of our hosting costs. Our monthly donations are double our hosting costs. And we’ve gotten donations from private charity funds and are eligible for grants. This is all from less than 1% of our user base paying us just a little bit, usually <$10.

      Lemmy is infinitely more efficient to host than Mastodon, and I’m sure some Elixir-based alternative will come along and make it cheaper to host too. The fact that Patreon is as successful as it is right now and that creators can make a living off of it shows that this model is self-sustaining and that you don’t need advertisements or to profit.

    • @falconfetus8
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      411 months ago

      When content gets federated to another instance, who does the advertising money go to? Does it go to the instance the content came from, or to the instance the content was viewed on?

    • @rms1990
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      211 months ago

      As soon as ad’s show up, bye bye.

    • Margot Robbie
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      -611 months ago

      Advertisements are fine, as long as it’s not too hard to block, or if they follow the same rule as other posts in that you can always upvote/downvote and comment on them.

      I don’t think many instance admin would go for it though currently, as that would be the fastest way to turn your users against you.

      • @FringeTheory999
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        811 months ago

        I would prefer that ads NOT be the same as regular posts to prevent people from mistaking promoted ads for actual content. Reddit was really bad about this, you would click a thing thinking it was legitimate only to find out it was an ad after the fact. I want my content and my ads to remain separate. They need to be clearly marked (not stealthily marked like on reddit), the ratio of ads to content should heavily favor content, and they need to be dismissible.

      • eatham 🇭🇲
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        11 months ago

        Maybe admins could start with opt-in ads that they ask if you want when you create an account? Very few people would accept them but some would and even tho it wouldn’t cover the costs it could help a bit. You definitely shouldn’t just enable ads for all tho

  • @XanXic
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    5911 months ago

    I’d say “sort of.” Lemmy as a software is under a classic benevolent dictator situation. It’s open source but as long as the lead devs remain two people we are kind of at their whim. Yeah someone could fork it but it’s the same issue of you’re now at the whim of that person keeping their fork up to date and what they want to do. Until they kind of allow more people having a say on the main repo it’s up in the air what happens truly.

    We’ve seen this same situation with Emby to Jellyfin. Where the open source project gets so good it goes close source, becomes a company and leaves everyone scrambling to get people to help work on the last bit of open source code. Meanwhile Emby just used their huge install base to upsell people. Jellyfin is still trying to get full parity with Emby despite Jellyfin having thousands of contributors and being open source. It’s hard to keep up with well funded innovation compared to volunteer work.

    • @zephyr
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      2811 months ago

      so good it goes close source

      That’s what the GPL is for: preserve freedom of the users.

      • @grue
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        1111 months ago

        To put a finer point on it, that’s precisely why it’s important for Free Software to be copyleft rather than merely permissively-licensed. (And for it to either have a trustworthy copyright holder, like the Free Software Foundation or similar non-profit, or to have too many copyright holders to make changing the license tractable.)

        • @Freesoftwareenjoyer
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          Exactly. They would have to rewrite all the code in order to make it proprietary. AGPL license ensures that not even an instance owner can (legally) change the code of their own instance without releasing the modified source code.

          We need to make sure that any apps that are created for Lemmy, also have a Copyleft license. At the very least they should be Free Software (which doesn’t seem to be guaranteed sadly, since most people don’t know what that means).

          • @funkyb
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            611 months ago

            “Created for Lemmy” isn’t really a thing, all you need is to implement the ActivityPub protocol. Whether or not it has any relationship to Lemmy has no bearing on if it can talk to instances using Lemmy’s implementation.

            • @Freesoftwareenjoyer
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              111 months ago

              I see, but apps are already being created specifically for using Lemmy. Like Jerboa. So there must be a reason why people want to use them instead of using apps for Mastodon?

              • @AustralianSimon
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                311 months ago

                Mastodon mobile apps and Lemmy mobile apps are not compatible with each other afaik. The Lemmy API is different to the Mastodon API. Their communication protocol between instances is ActivityPub.

              • @grue
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                211 months ago

                I think what the other guy meant was more along the lines of pointing out that there’s no way to enforce that software interacting with Lemmy has to be copyleft.

    • @[email protected]
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      2311 months ago

      I jumped ship from Emby to Jellyfin a long time ago. Just looked at their site now: “Purchase Emby Premiere and receive additional bonus features such as Cover Art, Mobile Sync, Cloud Sync, and free Android apps.” Pretty sure you get all that in Jellyfin already.

      • @pory
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        211 months ago

        Wow, I thought Emby was also open source. Why would anyone pay for and install Emby when Plex is around as the closed-source “standard”? You pick Jellyfin for FOSS, you pick Plex for “It just works” and because it’s the known name in the scene. Why would you pick a non-FOSS Emby?

        • @AustralianSimon
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          111 months ago

          They were, then they started closing features behind paywalls which is why Jellyfin was forked from Emby.

    • @Freesoftwareenjoyer
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      2011 months ago

      There is no dictator. The developers don’t have any control over people’s instances. They have very little power. We are the ones that have all the power since Lemmy is decentralized and Free Software.

      On Reddit the users have way less power, but more than they realize. They can’t create their own instance of Reddit, but they can leave the platform entirely (and probably overwrite all their content with gibberish), which would probably kill the company.

      • @Warfle99
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        1411 months ago

        I’d say it’s still behest to the benevolent dictator but it’s easier to switch to another if one goes bad. Lemmy.world is up to 150k users. It’s a main instance now and Ruud is providing server space for us all to use. If he goes bad then someone else has to step up and provide server space for other instances to take up capacity.

        • @Zeoic
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          1511 months ago

          Lemmy as a whole is at 150k, lemmy.world is at 33k right now, and is 3k behind lemmy.ml (though it seems lemmy.world has more active users).

        • @Freesoftwareenjoyer
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          So who is the dictator then? Ruud or the developers? :) We could call him a dictator of his own instance and it is certainly the most popular one right now.

          I guess Reddit users don’t want to leave their platform, because they are afraid of losing the content and the community. Most of them probably haven’t seen that there is a good alternative yet. When we are using one Lemmy instance, we know that there are many alternatives, because we know that that’s the whole point of Lemmy. So even if there is a big instance that has most of the users, it should be fine. It would be better if the users were more spread out though.

          • @Warfle99
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            11 months ago

            I’m trying out lemmy and enjoying it so far it feels more engaging (I was using baconreader and had a lot of smaller communities). I loved reddit for what it was and am pissed at corporate assholes ruining it for profits. Lemmy has made the internet feel a little bigger again.

            I’d say each instance host is their own dictator, but there are so many hosts that you can always move to another if you dont like what theyre doing. It’s not like you’re stuck spending money to jump from one to a next and apps like Jerboa let you copy your instance accounts to eachother.

            • @Freesoftwareenjoyer
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              411 months ago

              Maybe it’s inevitable that every proprietary and centralized platform will end this way. They just keep getting worse. It’s been exciting watching Mastodon grow and now Lemmy. We now have a chance to change something and become more independent from greedy corporations. We can have software and platforms that don’t exploit us and where we, the users are the ones in control. People only need to want to make the switch. Then we can have a better Reddit here.

              I didn’t know Jerboa had a feature like that. That’s awesome!

              • @Warfle99
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                311 months ago

                Feature wise it’s more you attach multiple accounts and can sub on all of them to the same things. It’s still a work in progress but they’re adding features.

      • @XanXic
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        611 months ago

        Benevolent dictator is a software development term, that’s why it’s italicized. It’s not literal

    • @funkyb
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      1311 months ago

      Sure but anyone can implement something using the activityPub spec and federate with other instances regardless of what flavor they’re using.

    • @perviouslyiner
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      411 months ago

      It might need something more like Wikipedia or OpenStreetMap with a ‘foundation’ nonprofit, a content policy, a dispute council, all the legal paperwork etc.

    • @maggoats
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      111 months ago

      I think there’s a good mechanism to keep that from happening given that you can always just spin up your own instance or join a different one and still be federated with every other instance of interest.

      That current state of affairs (people having content on a multitude of instances) should keep that from happening, since a bad actor would need to capture sufficient content as to have the only instance worth visiting.

      I can’t foresee myself years from now having a problem making a new account on some-new-lemmy.place in under 3 minutes and continuing on my merry way.

      Or at least that’s how it seems to me.

    • @julianarestrepo
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      -1011 months ago

      honestly the internet should be nationalized its the only way to ensure fair competition

  • HobbitFoot
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    5211 months ago

    Not exactly. Lemmy has separated the developer role from the admin role.

    From a developer role, Lemmy is going to need to figure out a way to scale up development. Two full time developers isn’t going to be enough to get Lemmy to a position it can compete against Reddit or the next Reddit. Lemmy is rough around the edges and needs work; it needs to develop ways to incorporate code from others.

    From an admin role, the various servers are going to need to solve major issues, including how to fund server costs. We are also seeing the fraying of the federation model as different admins have different goals for their part of Lemmy and these goals clash with each other.

    There is going to be a ton of growing pains, and some of them are going to come from the fact that there isn’t a CEO of Lemmy to choose which way to resolve problems.

    • @falconfetus8
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      3011 months ago

      From a developer role, Lemmy is going to need to figure out a way to scale up development.

      No they don’t. The platform is open source, so the more users they have, the more of those users will become contributors.

      • @[email protected]
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        3311 months ago

        Yes they do. This is why some FOSS goes to places like Apache, why there’s a Python foundation, Spark has Databricks, Kafka Confluent and Trino Starburst.

        The good thing about open source is that it allows everyone to contribute code to the base. The bad thing about open source is thay it allows everyone to contribute code to the base.

        You need repo maintainers, developers that are constant contributor, code reviewers, people maintaining CI CD Pipelines, etc etc.

        Yes it’s less than having proprietary, but it’s nowhere near “0”.

      • HobbitFoot
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        1011 months ago

        But how is the organization going to handle and review all this additional code? You can’t just trust someone coded something correctly without reviewing the code.

    • @Rob
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      511 months ago

      deleted by creator

    • @Rob
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      411 months ago

      deleted by creator

  • @drapermache
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    5011 months ago

    This is what I like about Lemmy and the fediverse; Its not like some rich company or person could really take over Lemmy and then pull a twitter or a reddit. The only way I could see things going south is if corporations start buying popular instances and then creating terrible policies and/or mine all of the data collected in the Lemmy instance, but with Lemmy you could just move to another instance.

    Right now I feel like were in the same position when Linux started out - really cool in concept but with no clear way to monetize which causes doubts for its future. It wasn’t until RedHat really popularized the support for enterprises model that Linux really solidified its future; they found a way to monetize open source projects. Lemmy itself is very young and will need to have its RedHat moment, otherwise its doomed to fail – donations are nice but are never enough.

    As a side note to this - I find it funny that companies are super eager to replace people at the bottom with AI when in my mind it would be easier to replace a CEO with AI to ingest company data and make cost-cutting decisions, or to be able to look at the market and determine what a company should be doing in order to compete. CEO positions are the most expensive for a company so eliminating it with a machine would save investors TONS of money. It would never need meetings, just take in input of whats going on in the company and externally in its competing market.

    • @Brickhead92
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      1111 months ago

      We’ll need someone to input that data, I guess we’ll need to create a new position for that.

      I shall be the CAIIO (chief AI input officer) and may salary will only be $150m.

      • @OpenHammer6677
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        1011 months ago

        Hey that’s a lot of work for one dude. I’ll be your associate. I shall be the ACAIIO and my salary is twice as much as yours because of the longer title

        • @Freesoftwareenjoyer
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          411 months ago

          Guys, we can all share. I’m sure we can create plenty of management and HR positions for everyone ;)

    • @Freesoftwareenjoyer
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      I disagree. The Free Software movement and the GNU/Linux operating system weren’t created for profit, but for user freedom. There is nothing wrong with making money in an ethical way (unlike what Reddit does), but that is not necessary for projects to survive and there are plenty of examples of this. Debian for example is a fully free operating system and it’s maintained entirely by volunteers for free.

      The Free Software Foundation, Mozilla Foundation, Blender Foundation. They are all non-profits.

    • @spiritedpause
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      The only way I could see things going south is if corporations start buying popular instances

      It’s not quite the same, but Meta/Instagram is working on a Twitter competitor that will use ActivityPub and therefore is essentially one huge Fediverse instance that they’re launching.

      https://www.theregister.com/2023/03/11/meta_twitter_rival/

    • @MBM
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      211 months ago

      AI CEOs sound like a nightmare, lol. They’re exactly as capitalistic as the data they trained on but now “the AI said it so it must be objectively good”

  • @WolfhoundRO
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    11 months ago

    “Welcome, I’m the CEO of email!”

    Really, it should be kept more like an overplatform or protocol like what the email is. Luckily, Lemmy has the roles of developers and content admins so separated and decentralized that it shouldn’t become a corpo-danger from now on

  • @ronaldtemp1
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    11 months ago

    And with the exodus of users from Reddit to Lemmy which created a significant base of decentralised online community, we just witnessed history where human beings achieved the next level of freedom of expression free from manipulation by a handful of powerful individuals

      • @samus12345
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        611 months ago

        Very tiny, but I suspect that the ones that left are of higher than average quality.

      • @[email protected]
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        111 months ago

        It takes a long ass time for social media to die. Because the bulk of users just don’t use it often.

        Shit, Fark is still technically going.

        There’s millions of zombie reddit accounts and bots that will never be shut down.

        What you need to pay attention to is the active user numbers.

  • lightrush
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    11 months ago

    One issue that I don’t think Lemmy has tackled collectively is the licensing of the user data. Lemmy is open source and that’s one crucial part of the enshittification resistance equation. The other is doing the equivalent for the user data. If the user data is licensed under the right version of the CC license, it will ensure that it can always be copied to another instance in cases of instance enshittification. As far as I know, there isn’t anything about who owns the user data. That defaults to every author having copyright over their data. While this means the instance owner can’t sell it without permission from every user it’s also not conductive to moving bulk data across instances. Individual migration would improve this significantly but I believe we should switch to having user data licensed under some CC license too.

    If all of this sounds strange, think Wikipedia. That’s what guarantees data contributed to Wikipedia stays within our hands irrespective of what the Wikimedia Foundation does.

    • @incognito_mode
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      1511 months ago

      This is a great point. The user data needs to be enshrined in such a way that it can be easily moved in a bulk migration without requiring a direct opt-in from every user. While at the same time making it clear how it’s being used/kept/sold/not sold/etc.

      I’m not against LLMs using the data generated on sites like this to inform useful answers when I ask ChatGPT a question. It genuinely makes AI a better tool, but I feel like the contributors of such content should know how their answers are being used.

      • lightrush
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        11 months ago

        LLMs are likely going to scrape no matter the license. I doubt OpenAI got a copyright license from Reddit to ingest it. In fact I’m not even sure they need one if ingestion can be make similar enough to “reading the web site”. And so making content CC probably won’t affect LLM use of public posts.

        • @incognito_mode
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          311 months ago

          Yeah, I understand that screen scraping is a thing, and having a robot just simply read an entire website means there’s nothing you can do to stop that from happening short of taking the website offline.

          I was talking about in a more structured and proactive way “We know that AI will read our site, and ingest that for LLM, instead of simply accepting that as an inevitability we’re extending this offer instead, for a nominal fee we will provide them with the entirety of our sites information with all screen names redacted to protect the identity of the content creators, in exchange for them not simply using AI to read our site.”

          Or something to that effect. Accept that it will happen, and there’s nothing you can really do to stop it. But to package the data in a clean way so that they don’t have too, and can simply ingest it into the LLM data sets directly.

      • @pwnstar
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        311 months ago

        What license would be appropriate for that? I’ve always been interested since I do photography, and it seems like any site like that needs nearly full rights so that they can store and distribute as they see fit so that they can do backups, migration, etc. What license would give those, but keep the full rights of the creator intact?

        (I know nothing on the topic, just curious)

  • @elonspez
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    3911 months ago

    It’s called decentralized

  • Ghostalmedia
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    3511 months ago

    You’re posting this on lemmy.world. The owner of this instance, the biggest new instance, is literally building out a business of instance hosting.

    If this goes well, and his business grows, it will have chief executives.

    • @average650
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      4911 months ago

      But there will be other instances. If this one does something stupid, then we go to another one and miss almost nothing.

      • @[email protected]
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        1211 months ago

        That’s a bit like saying “Yeah so we don’t care what reddit does, because you can always go somewhere else”

        It’s the biggest instance, so it’s where most of the community and content would be etc etc. Just like what happened with beehaw could happen to world as well. This is only true for a mature decentralized federated ecosystem with a lot of redundant communities so that if one goes down you can easily consume the same content from a different instence. Is that the case now? I would say no, so it’s even less leader-proof.

        • @average650
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          2211 months ago

          Lemmy is perfectly fine with beehaw defederating.

          There is certainly the risk of a single instance dominating. But even now there are a few significant instances and losing beehaw didn’t ruin anything.

          • @[email protected]
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            111 months ago

            True, but a lot of the main communities I subscribed to were in Beehaw, so I’ve mostly abandoned my lemmy.world account and moved to a smaller instance that’s less likely to get defederated from

          • @[email protected]
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            011 months ago

            The main point, or why it’s fine is because it’s new. Losing it is not really that important right now, because being honest. We’re a grain of sand in comparison. So It’s not much that we lose. But extrapolate and now you have 50 million users on .world and suddenly they shut the server down. Not defederation, it shuts down. Sure you can say “oh well… I guess time to start over” I would wager most people will be like “Nah, fuck this… I’ll go somewhere else that might not implode” right now we’re on the reddit hate train and hyped the fuck up. Later on those servers will be getting bigger and more expensive. Some might cover it with donations, some might not.

            • @average650
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              111 months ago

              If we have ~5 major instances, then yes a loss of 10 million is not good, but it certainly doesn’t kill lemmy. There’s no need to start over, there’s no need to change anything.

              If the fediverse is healthy, it can handle that kind of loss without any issue. If we get all funneled into 1 or 2 instances, then yeah, we’re gonna have problems.

        • @JesusTheCarpenter
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          711 months ago

          Why so doom-and-gloom already? We just moved from Reddit and peope are excited about the possibilities that fediverse brings. Which are undeniably much broader when compared to Reddit.

          Of course we don’t know what is going to happen in the future, but this model certainly has better chances of being run “by the people for the people”.

          I don’t care that the admins of lemmy.world money make a business out of it. In fact I would be glad if they did.

          Having said that they know perfectly well what happend to Reddit when the company wanted to become more authoritarian. And we are talking about people jumping ship from Reddit to fediverse which is way big of a deal than people jumping from one instance to another which, once you are versed and familiar with how fediverse works, is child play.

          My point is that the only business to make with fediverse is the one that servers the users, that is, a “CEO” or a collective will have no option but deeply care what the users want and need to make some bucks. Otherwise this enterprise can collaps really quickly when people jump to another instance.

      • @graphite
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        511 months ago

        It’s definitely good, but it isn’t full proof. Nothing is.

          • @graphite
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            11 months ago

            Guess it’s my turn

        • @average650
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          311 months ago

          RIght. It does depend on there being multiple major instances.

    • lightrush
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      11 months ago

      It depends what he’s the CEO of. For example whether it’s a non-profit, a for-profit, a co-op, etc. It also depends on the licensing of the data. I don’t think this last bit has been tackled by Lemmy yet. Wikipedia has done it quite successfully. If the data is licensed under CC for example, and backups are published, then migration of the whole instance becomes possible like it is for Wikipedia. That would be one hell of a disincentive to fuck around, even if the company is for-profit. Non-profit co-op plus CC-licensed data is probably the most resistant.

  • @vegai
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    11 months ago

    More generally speaking, Lemmy (and other federated services) are board-proof. CEOs are not typically the actual culprit, they are the puppets of the wishes of the board. Often times they have significant power, especially if they are also member of the board or a significant owner, but not always.

    In case of reddit, it’s owned by Condé Nast, which is a subsidiary of Advance Publications.

    • Berserker
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      611 months ago

      Exactly. Decentralized services and servers that are unified in a common standard is the way the web should always have been.

      Someone fucked up and told the advertisers that a dollar could be made so we end up with the ad cancer that is the ‘modern’ web.

    • @SheeEttin
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      211 months ago

      It’s a direct “independent” subsidiary of Advance Publishing, and has been since 2011.

    • @[email protected]
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      111 months ago

      Hence the E in CEO: executive.

      They execute the will of the board.

      Given that boards and CxO’s are all cronies anyway there’s very little difference.

      Hiring CxO’s happens at the golf club.

  • @ransomwarelettuce
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    3411 months ago

    Does not have CEO, yet …

    But I can solve that. From now on I will take that burden.

    Refer to me as super cool Lemmy CEO

    First order of business, I command you lemmings to vibe.

    Stay tunned for upcoming changes !!!

    • @MajinBlayze
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      1011 months ago

      Lemmy.world might get a CEO, but it’ll be different then the Lemmy software (which is open source) and it appears to be possible to migrate off of a given instance if this one gets unreasonable

    • @rms1990
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      211 months ago

      Fuck off CEO

        • @rms1990
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          11 months ago

          You can chain me but I will never be silent and I will never stop fighting for a FOSS/JS-free web

          • @ransomwarelettuce
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            11 months ago

            Oh chain you?! Don’t threaten me with a good time.

            *wips you

            Who is my dirty litlle Stallman?

            Have you heard of Linux Operating system, I heard they are pushing proprietary code in kernel for better performance does that not sound good my boy?

            • @rms1990
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              211 months ago

              NOOOOOOO!!!

  • @scarabic
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    3311 months ago

    When we think CEO we need to think “shareholders.” Including potential shareholders as in Reddit’s case. I think sometimes we are so focused on our feelings about a “big boss” that we forget the CEO is merely an avatar for the investor point of view in a business. They answer to the board of directors who represent or are even made up of shareholders, and they are usually paid in such a way to motivate shareholder benefits, like with stock instead of a high salary.

    And when we think “shareholders” we need to think “loan money.” That’s how you get to be a shareholder. You plunk down some cash to float the business.

    Therefore, to really be CEO-proof, an entity needs to be fiscally independent and never need an advance of cash to keep going. It must be entirely bootstrapped, paid-as-you-go, with no one standing to gain a whole bunch or lose a whole bunch by its failure or sale. That’s kind of a lot of needles to thread when you’re building something big. It can be done but we have to know what game we’re actually playing and not get distracted by “fuck The Man” sentiments. This is about cash.

    • @SirMcLouis
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      911 months ago

      Literally this… what is happening in Reddit is the CEO attending the needs of the shareholder via the board… companies aren’t the “sisters of charity”. They are where they are for profit and at the very least they need to have a cash flow that allow them to pay employees and bills. There are some B Corps out there, but most of the companies are there to make the big buck. In the case of Reddit we users are just a product that they try to keep to make the company profitable selling ads or whatever. If you want a Reddit-kind-of platform user-centric we need to pay for it and become the customers instead the product.

      • @Asafum
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        411 months ago

        But isn’t reddit still a private company? They don’t have shareholders in that case right? They WANT shareholders which is why they’re pulling this b.s to appear profitable when they go public. I think this is just plain old greed.

        • @bpmd
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          511 months ago

          Private companies can have shareholders too, it’s just that the shares can’t be sold on a public stock exchange. Reddit has a board and private shareholders, I think Conde Nast (or it’s parent company) is one, and so is Tencent.

      • @damniel
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        211 months ago

        It’s understandable for reddit to need money to continue functioning. That’s never been the argument. The problem is how unreasonable the pricing is and how unwaverable they are about it.

      • Be Here Now
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        211 months ago

        undefined> They are where they are for profit

        Initially corporations were supposed to put the public good above profits. Now they have a legal obligation to put the interest of their shareholders above all else (usually interpreted as profits above all else). It was an unfortunate shift.

    • @hark
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      311 months ago

      To be fair, CEOs are often compensated largely through stock and are therefore incentivized to boost that stock price, at least until they have the opportunity to sell (or use as collateral on a loan with an inflated valuation, I’m not super familiar with the financial trickery played at that level).

      • @scarabic
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        111 months ago

        I did say pretty much just that:

        and they are usually paid in such a way to motivate shareholder benefits, like with stock instead of a high salary.

  • @CliveRosfield
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    11 months ago

    So who actually owns the server this instance runs on? Doesn’t it just mean they do whatever they want? So confused

    • @jawknee530
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      2011 months ago

      There are a ton of Lemmy instances that all communicate with each other and each instance is ran on hardware by different owners. So if one instance goes to shit your account will still work on all the other ones.

      • @s38b35M5
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        2711 months ago

        So if one instance goes to shit your account will still work on all the other ones.

        My understanding is that (at present anyway) since accounts are not federated, your account on that “gone to shit” instance will be gone. Your content will still be on many federated instances, but not your account. That would be lost.

        • @iamsgod
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          911 months ago

          this is my understanding too. like, I was confused why my account doesn’t work for lemmy.my, but then I find out that I still can comment on it from lemmy.world

          • @HollowNotion
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            211 months ago

            Yep. I love the idea, and I’m liking the lemmy experience so far for the most part, but this has to be communicated to new users more effectively, imo.

        • @[email protected]
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          711 months ago

          Yeah, one thing Lemmy needs to solve is account migration. Instead of creating a new account on a new instance you move your existing account from one instance to another. It won’t save the account if the instance is already removed, but it at least gives an option to move if you feel like there’s a better instance for you.

      • @CliveRosfield
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        1111 months ago

        Ah… dope. So it’s currently just running through donations I presume. Another dumb question: If an instance owner goes rogue and just nukes it are your posts gone too or is it archived somewhere?

        • @[email protected]
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          311 months ago

          every post you make that is seen by at least one other instance other than yours, it saved as a copy on that other instance.
          That’s basically how instances communicate with each other, If you as a lemmy.world user go to lemmy.ml, lemmy.world get’s a copy of the content of lemmy.ml. In the same way if you post something direclty on lemmy.world, that post will be included in copys of every other instance viewed lemmy.world after you made that comment.

        • @jawknee530
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          211 months ago

          I believe your posts on that one instance will be gone but I’m actually unsure. Still learning about it myself

          • @damipereira
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            211 months ago

            I think so too, a good feature for the future would be redundancy and third party backups, so people can be held accountable. Or you could back up an instance in your own machine if you want. I thinl this kind of stuff will be developed in time.

        • @[email protected]B
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          111 months ago

          Technically, anything can be scraped (e.g. Internet Archive), but that doesn’t mean it’s interactive.

          I’d say the volatility of computer data means someone could theoretically nuke it whenever they want, though there may be remnants on other instances.

          I’m curious enough to enforce Cunningham’s Law: It’s not on blockchain, so it’s deleted if the instance is deleted.

      • @GalacticRobot
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        411 months ago

        So if a Lemmy instance goes down, all of the communities and comments go down with it? Seems almost worst than having a CEO?

        • @CliveRosfield
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          911 months ago

          Seems like the saving grace is anyone can either start or move to a different lemmy instance whenever. It’s not like someone can just host their own copy of Reddit if spez ever went nuclear.

  • @maplealmond
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    2611 months ago

    CEO proof is a good reason to describe why I want my podcasts to come via an RSS feed instead of depending on an all-in-one app. I’ve often said things about open gardens and interoperable services, but that preaches to the choir.

    “CEO Proof” really sells it to a non technical user.

  • @hikarulsi
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    2311 months ago

    Not CEO-proof until user and community migration by individual is possible