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t/Android is now on the Fediverse
  • I mean... this sort of attitude you have is kind of self-defeating, no? Like let the /r/Android mods have their own community. These public spats make it confusing for end users. The fediverse doesn't have to be one big happy family - people have freedom to associate with some communities and not others. Duplication is bound to happen in the early days of this fediverse thing.

  • t/Android is now on the Fediverse
  • Eh, I can see that, but the whole point of the fediverse is to get away from centralization, right? I think it's a good thing they are promoting their own instance on Lemmy. Only issue is that for right now at least - all of the instances look the same...

  • t/Android is now on the Fediverse
  • They still get to moderate /r/android. In the old times of discrete message board communities, there were various Android message board communities before everything started coalescing around Reddit. It's impossible to have an opportunity to moderate every single community. If they want to create their own duplicate community, they are free to do so.

  • t/Android is now on the Fediverse
  • Can you explain what the controversy is about? So the /r/Android mods tried to start an Android community on the fediverse but other people got to them first? How are they astroturfing?

  • Done with Twitter and Reddit
  • Time will tell. Lemmy needs more users and more content. Feels like Reddit from the late 2000s right now. The demographic is mostly male/tech-literate and the only threads that get responses are tech and gaming subjects.

  • Locked
    YSK: While you're on Lemmy/Kbin/Fediverse, you're not "the product" but you're also not "the customer".
  • Here's the thing: the rest of life (rent, food, retirement etc.) cost so much already that anything I can get for free or don't have to pay for in some way I will make that choice to pirate or not pay. If capitalism wasn't breathing down my neck with all this crazy inflation in food costs, rent increases, student loan repayments, etc., perhaps I would be more amenable to paying for newspapers and online services and all that nice to have stuff. Don't hate the player, hate the game.

  • Would darknet market discussion be allowed on Lemmy?

    Hey guys,

    Years and years ago, Reddit had a sub where you could discuss darknet markets. For those uninitiated, a darknet market is a Tor hidden service where you can buy contraband with cryptocurrency.

    Unfortunately, several years ago, Reddit shut down this sub because it "violated new rules about the sale of illegal goods" and most of that discussion has moved elsewhere. But with the rules being looser on the fediverse, would anyone be interested in setting up a forum for such discussion here? Would the admins here even allow it?

    I'm really excited about how Lemmy can bring back certain communities disallowed by Reddit.

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    Locked
    YSK: While you're on Lemmy/Kbin/Fediverse, you're not "the product" but you're also not "the customer".
  • Rent and food come first for me. Online services are fungible. Like if it's free to use or free to take, I'll take advantage. We all have to eat first and some of us don't earn enough money to donate to a free project. Donations are a luxury to me.

    Don't judge, 99% of the people using Lemmy and its various instances will never donate. We contribute happily through our posts.

  • Locked
    YSK: While you're on Lemmy/Kbin/Fediverse, you're not "the product" but you're also not "the customer".
  • Well, I will sound immensely selfish, and maybe it's because I've been so used to "free everything" on the Internet, but I will never pay for an online service ever. I pirate all my books, all my TV shows, and use scripts and archive.is to read online newspapers and magazines for free. Life costs so much money already, I will never ever feel bothered to actually donate to an online service or free software.

    If Lemmy.world goes down due to lack of funds, no problem from me. I'll join a different instance and carry on. Or go back to Reddit.

    I'll happily admit to being a loafer on the Internet. I expect little from my services so long as I don't have to pay shit for it.

  • Preparing for Future Corporate Influence
  • There won't be.

    Just go back to the Internet forums of old - many major forums back in the day were ran as small businesses with subscriptions and advertising. I hope the fediverse does allow a commercial model - we need diversity in how to fund such infrastructure. If some instance owners want to institute subscriptions or include advertising on their instances, that should be a feature that the Lemmy developers should seriously consider. Otherwise, it's hard to scale a service like this on donations alone.

  • Locked
    YSK: While you're on Lemmy/Kbin/Fediverse, you're not "the product" but you're also not "the customer".
  • Eh, I like free software the same way I like free beer - I don't ever have to pay for it, and no one can compel me to. The beauty of community projects and free software. I enjoy being a freeloader, thanks very much. I will contribute by making this an active project with my posts.

  • Do you feel that there's a lack of discussion on Lemmy about stuff besides the current Reddit and Twitter controversies?

    I've been on Beehaw and Lemmy.world for the past two weeks now and while people seem to be posting content that isn't about Reddit or Twitter or how great federated platforms are, such content does not receive as many comments/discussion as topics about the Reddit API controversy, or the current Twitter controversy, etc.

    I prefer to sort by "new" when on the main page of either Beehaw or Lemmy.world. Most posts scarcely get a few upvotes and almost no comments. Without comments, I feel far less inclined to leave a comment unless there's a discussion already going on.

    It feels like the gravity of discussion is still mostly centered on complaints and discussion about Reddit (or Big Tech in general), despite this platform being billed as a Reddit replacement. Hopefully that changes with time but there's a reason I haven't left Reddit yet.

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    How did Lemmy.world become more popular than Lemmy.ml?
  • Lemmy.ml is run by tankies who brook no criticism of Russia for its conduct of the war in Ukraine. I was on there, saw posts about the war being deleted and users who raise even pointed criticism at the mods/admins for their Russophilia get banned.

  • Reddit's Valuation Has Fallen Even Further, Fidelity Says
  • The reality is that unless you have immense, immense scale (i.e., Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, LinkedIn), making money off social media is impossible. Twitter barely made any money before Elon Musk took it over, and it's making less now.

    Reddit is pseudo-anonymous too and is harder to monetize, because high ad rates come from being able to identify your users.

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