Sam_uk

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago

@Chozo I wonder if this bodes well for Kbin/Lemmy? Arguably their model is more about content than social relationships.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

@mystphyre AFAIK this is a known issue that the developers have been looking at in the last few days. Hope to have a fix soon

 
[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I'm curious why this recent trend isn't visible in Google Trends? I watched the November exodus unfold in real time there. This time not a glimmer of activity

[email protected]

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

@Redhotkurt it sounds like maybe you should create it?

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

@poVoq yes this sounds sensible. I think the key is the user themselves having more control over their identity.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

@JonEFive I think the identity bit is the hard part, as you say most content will be federated/ cached in several locations for retrieval

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago (4 children)

WebauthN maybe? Pretty niche right now, but the threadiverse is quite a techy crowd..

@JonEFive

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago (5 children)

@JonEFive I've been wondering about separating the ID/auth from the app. Someone recently got Keycloak working and that has some possibilities for federation. Not sure if that really helps though. You still have to trust the keycloak admins

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago (7 children)

@JonEFive I do run an instance that's just for me https://fledd.it (configured as a news aggregator) it was easy on elest.io. $10/ month is too much for most people though. I don't think this is the route to mass adoption.

 

At the moment the server owner effectively 'owns' magazines & communities. Is that the right balance of power? What happens when servers go offline, or server admins go rogue?

In a world where both users and magazines had public and private keys and magazine moderators had the tools to do off-site backups.

Could the magazine moderator then do an unassisted migration to a new place?

They revoke the key that gives the original server the right to host the magazine. They use the key to re-create it on a new server.

Somehow notify all the members the magazine of the new location. The users use their public keys to reclaim their identities and content.

Would that give mods too much power?

It all gets complicated fairly quickly! I think the Bluesky AT protocol is somewhat close to this model for user content, but doesn't really extend to 'community' scale content.

It falls short of a full confederal protocol

20
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

I stuck a service on https://kbin.world that redirects you based on a IP lookup for your country. In descending order it tries to;

  • If there is a kbin instance for your country it redirects you there (Just Poland for now!)

  • If you have a feddit instance for your country it redirects you to the most appropriate magazine on that instance, within kbin.social eg Germany

  • If you have a large national community on another Lemmy instance it redirects you there, again within kbin.social (eg Brasil)

For the ones I haven't got around to it redirects you to kbin.social homepage

It could be broken down to regions too. As more national or regional kbin instances emerge I'll replace the existing feddit/other sites.

I did a bit of testing with Pingdom and it seems to work

In the process I noticed that New Zealand and Japan feddit instances won't load for some reason. Any idea why?

 

However, when reddit crapped the bed, by comparison, the threadiverse basically didn’t have an established culture. There was a handful of lemmy instances (we were one of them), but the only one of notable size was lemmy.ml. kbin didn’t even exist in any meaningful way until a couple of months before reddit died.

So, when reddit died, there was no established culture. Instead, people brought reddit culture with them, and reddit culture, because of lax admins, was much more tolerant of hate speech than microfedi. And so, people who are “reddit people” more than “fediverse people” set up lemmy and kbin instances, and brought those reddit norms with them.

So then, you get instances like blahaj and beehaw that are threadiverse instances, but have the “old school” microfedi approach to bigotry. We smash it down hard at the first hint of seeing it, but most of the instances we federate with don’t attack it so aggressively.

 

You may be able sign up directly on !worldnews

You could subscribe the main magazine on
Kbin.social or Lemmy.world

It's fed by a bot, but human submissions welcome too. If a human makes a post the bot stops posting for one hour.

Comments and upvotes will improve it.

 

In many supermarkets across South Korea, one item has conspicuously vanished from shelves: salt.

 

You can't sign up directly on !worldnews as registration is not enabled.

You could subscribe the main magazine on Kbin.social or Lemmy.world though

 

Japan wants to release Fukushima's waste water into the ocean - and a lot of people are not happy.

 

Find your next diving spot. A list of subreddit alternatives on different platforms.

 
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