Fediverse

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A community dedicated to fediverse news and discussion.

Fediverse is a portmanteau of "federation" and "universe".

Getting started on Fediverse;

founded 5 years ago
MODERATORS
801
 
 

Want to watch the #threadiverse growing by the hour?

@tao just set up @threadcount, which posts every hour the number of new people signing up to #Kbin and #Lemmy

post submitted to @kbinMeta on Kbin and @fediverse on Lemmy

802
 
 

"Fediverse Foundation was at the Südwind Straßenfest in Vienna"

just came across this picture by @PaulaToThePeople of a #fediverse booth setup last week!
via https://joinfediverse.wiki/Fediverse_Foundation @fediverse

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I just stumbled about this video on federated alternatives to Reddit.

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someone is working on a reddit api compatibility shim so reddit apps could connect to Lemmy without redesigning their apps

https://github.com/derivator/tafkars/tree/main/tafkars-lemmy

"Tafkars stands for "The API formerly known as...", is written in Rust and is pronounced like "tough cars". Tafkars is an API proxy that allows apps to talk to Lemmy through a familiar API from a kinder time. The hope is that this will make it easy for app developers to support Lemmy with only minimal code changes." @fediverse

806
 
 

This is something I wondered about the federated microblogging platforms that I never got a clear answer about. It's less relevant to Lemmy as federation here is broken down by community and not the entire instance, unlike the microblogging sites. If I have a Mastodon instance named myinstance.com and I follow someone or interact with a post on remoteinstance.com, according to the documentation, our instances have "discovered" each other. myinstance.com will fetch all posts from remoteinstance.com from that point onwards and display them in the federated timeline. But does this mean that the users on remoteinstance.com will also fetch posts from myinstance.com if no user on remoteinstance.com has interacted with myinstance.com before?

807
 
 

Please check my post, I think everything I said is very valid, but I want this community to see it too, and help steer the discussion, I think reddit is doing this intentionally.

808
 
 

Using this new Lemmy platform kinda reminds me if using Reddit almost 10years ago. Platform was fairly new to me. I could somewhat explore new content. There were still some kinks that needed work. People talking about digg…, etc.

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submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by feb@loma.ml to c/fediverse@lemmy.ml
 
 

For all those who have contact with the Fediverse for the first time. A beautiful and light description of what the Fediverse is or wants to be. Take a look. We are facebook, twitter, instagram, rabbit and whatever they are all called, united in one network. We can talk to each other, no matter which project you use.

fediverse.party/en/post/fedive…

810
 
 

The first post I viewed (I'm brand spanking new) had an awful troll comment. It was quickly removed, but it was mentioned they'd made comments on six different post before being banned. What protects the community from an instance that let's anyone join? Hope this was the correct place to post.

811
 
 

Hello! As all of you know there's been a recent migration of new users to places like this (me included). I'm thrilled about learning how to use these site and others alike, but I'm having trouble understading how it works. Is there a dumb down video about how the sites on the fediverse work and interact with each other? like mastodon, pixelfed, lemmy, etc. Sorry if there's an obvious answer, really knew in these. Ty!

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(reposted this from r/fediverse)

Should federated social media have a centralized website that users use to access it?

It would be like starting a server for a video game. If I host, say a Minecraft server, my friends won't connect directly to the server, rather we will all use the same software (Minecraft) to connect. In a similar way I could start a Mastodon instance, but we would all go to a single website, something like mastodon.com, and type in the url to my instance to access it.

The benefit of this would be removing a lot of friction that comes with interacting with users across instances. If I, a user of mas.to visit a user profile from someone on mastodon.world, I need to actually navigate to the website mastodon.world to see all of their posts. From here, I lose the ability to like posts, reply, or basically do anything. I need to copy the link back to my home instance to do anything with the content on mastodon.world

This is really confusing to users who haven't even realized they have been navigated to a different website, since the UI is all the same. One of my friends stopped using mastodon because she was confused why she kept being logged out seemingly for no reason. It's also unnecessary friction that stops me from being able to interact properly with the entire fediverse.

If I was accessing mastodon through a centralized website, I could stay logged in while viewing a profile or post from another user, and I still would be able to interact with it. I would never be navigated away to another website and logged out. It would be a much less confusing and frustrating experience and lower the barriers between instances.

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There's more than just lemmy.ml - my home on Mastodon SDF.org has a Lemmy instance as well.

I am figuring this out as well but, this link will allow you to find instances near you.

815
 
 

I've been using Lemmy for the last couple days and have quite liked it. I want to hear the community's thoughts on some of the other reddit "competitors".

The only other (obviously non-federated) one I'm familiar with is tildes.net, mostly just because I have had an account on it for the last few years.

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for the longest time a lot of images posted to reddit were really posted on imgur (until they started hosting it on their own, too). is there a fediverse'd imgur we should be using to complement lemmy? its docs say it shouldn't be used for large images and videos.

pixelfed seems more like a federated flickr or instagram, not just simple image/album hosting like imgur. thoughts? ty 💙

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The Big Social score so far:
- Twitter: burning
- Reddit: detonated a bomb under itself
- Meta: rumored to join #ActivityPub with a new app
- YouTube: videos were always 2nd to "native" ones on the other networks, but they could trivially open an #ActivityPub firehose (and maintain their preroll ads while doing so)
- rest of Google: never found organic success and don't have a bet in the game apart from wanting to index everything

No predictions here, just stating the obvious. @fediverse

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submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by valvin@beehaw.org to c/fediverse@lemmy.ml
 
 

A bit paradoxal but it looks that all central platform (twitter, reddit, facebook...) are helping the spread of Fediverse. Recently we saw the impact with Twitter on Mastodon, myself I've discovered Lemmy even if I wasn't a reddit user. And before that Facebook first spread friendica and diaspora. It looks next step will be around Youtube where Google try to lock more and more its user.

819
 
 

Viewing a group from Lemmy like @fediverse on Mastodon looks like a weird stream of retoots / boosts. That's probably going to confuse some folks as Lemmy & Kbin & friends take off

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@fediverse would you be recommending accounts from Lemmy and Kbin to Mastodon so that we can follow and interact with them?

821
 
 

Hey,

I think it should be possible. I can see kbin users posting on Lemmy, but I can't figure out how to do the inverse. Post on kbin from my lemmy account. Any hints?

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cross-posted from: https://beehaw.org/post/493388 cross-posted from: https://beehaw.org/post/493386

(I think this is probably an okay place to post this, lmk if not)

Looking for collaborators to create a new instance of Lemmy. Among other things this instance will differ from existing ones by having a self-governing structure. Check out the very rough draft linked below to learn about my current vision for this community. Much on the doc will change based on other people's ideas. This community's goal is for it to belong to the community. No specific skills needed, but please read through the concept outline before getting in touch. Any type of contribution is amazing. You just have to be interested. Join me in creating a unique and innovative platform.

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Don't tell people "it's easy", and six more things KBin, Lemmy, and the fediverse can learn from Mastodon

https://privacy.thenexus.today/kbin-lemmy-fediverse-learnings-from-mastodon/

Reddit's strategy of antagonizing app writters, moderators, and millions of redditors is good news for reddit alternatives like KBin and Lemmy. And not just them! The fediverse has always grown in waves and we're at the start of one.

Previous waves have led to innovation but also major challenges and limited growth. It's worth looking at what tactics worked well in the past, to use them again or adapt them and build on them. It's also valuable to look at what went wrong or didn't work out as well in the past, to see if there are ways to do better.

Here's the current table of contents:

* I'm flashing!!!!!
* But first, some background

  1. Don't tell people "it's easy"
  2. Improve the "getting-started experience"
  3. Keep scalability and sustainability in mind
  4. Prioritize accessibility
  5. Get ready for trolls, hate speech, harassment, spam, porn, and disinformation
  6. Invest in moderation tools
  7. Values matter

* This is a great opportunity – and it won't be the last great opportunity

https://privacy.thenexus.today/kbin-lemmy-fediverse-learnings-from-mastodon/

Thanks to everybody for the great feedback on the draft version of the post!

#kbin #lemmy #fediverse @fediversenews @fediverse@kbin.social @fediverse@lemmy.ml

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The title says. My current Lemmy client, Jerboa, which is made by an admin, could support kbin with assistance from kbin devs.

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Lately I often read about kbin.social being similar to lemmy but more accessible. So I created an account there to check it out. My experience so far is a little mixed. From kbin I can access all Lemmy posts, although I find the interface less intuitive to join new communities. So from the kbin side it feels like an other Lemmy instance.

But when searching for kbin from this Lemmy Account, I do not find much. I feel like I am missing some basic concept, that makes it pretty clear. Why this is such a one way experience.

So now I am wondering: How does this work, what are the difference, what do both sites have in common?

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