It's depressing to me how parasitic executives have become in American business. I think we need to bolster our laws to further make it illegal to drive businesses into the ground in this way. Cap how much executives can profit off of our system. As it is, something clearly needs to change. The current way of things is infinite growth prioritizing short term gains at the expense of long term stability to the point of failure at which point the business crumbles and c suite execs jump out with their golden parachutes. Then those execs can go on to run other newer healthier companies into the ground as well. It's all so flagrant too. We all see it happening but nothing can be done until our government steps up to the plate.
Gray
I'm pretty sure that when one instance blocks another, both become unreachable to each other. Mind you, that doesn't mean that you won't be able to see lemmygrad if you go there manually. One nice thing about Lemmy is that you don't need an account to see everything. You just won't be able to vote or comment without an account. Which to be honest is how it should be. One of the main reasons an instance would consider blocking another is if they don't want to be brigaded by people that aren't interested in having an honest conversation within their community. With that said, if instance A blocks instance B, there will almost certainly always exist an instance C that can still reach both other instances. So if lemmyworld ever did get blocked by instances you're really interested in, there should always be a way to have both.
The Witcher.
I think cellphones should be banned in classrooms and allowed between classes. I'm not sure why they should need to be banned during students' freetime. This is how it was when I was in high school during the very early years of smartphones and it worked out fine. If I wanted to listen to music while walking down the halls or during lunch, that was a really important coping mechanism for me with how dramatic high school can be. It also allowed me to keep in touch with my friends and meet them around the school. I think it's overly reactionary to do a blanket ban like that. I completely understand the need to ban them within classrooms. That's reasonable to me as classrooms should only be for learning.
This goes for every entitled social media company that has been undergoing enshittifcation. They get their content from us for free so for them to have the nerve to turn around and start creating all these rules and fees that worsen our experience is bullshit. We created their value and so when they forget that then we must do our part to take that value away.
I think defederation is an interesting element to Lemmy, but I wouldn't sweat too much over it. It's highly unlikely that any large instances are going to defederate from each other without a good reason. Namely NSFW content (so boobs don't show up on your "all" feed) and major political differences (so tankies and fascists and others with extreme political views don't bombard your communities). If you do want to subscribe to an instance with extreme political views or with boobs, then you'll probably need to have a few accounts for those different exceptions. And they can both be logged in at the same time. You can go to lemmy.world when you want regular content and lemmynsfw.com when you want boobs. But I really don't think you're going to feel defederation very much. Only in those exceptional cases. And there will always be instances that allow both the regular content and the nsfw/extreme content. If you disagree with your instance admins, you just need to find an instance that better matches what you want to see.
For what it's worth, lemmy.world seems pretty committed to not defederating. They haven't defederated from lemmygrad.ml (communist lemmy) like many other instances have. The only instance they've blocked explicitly approves of people posting loli (underage anime porn), which is pretty damming.
I don't think it's a problem or a feature. It's exactly what we saw on Reddit before it grew. It's not like Reddit had a limit on the number of subreddits a topic could have. As far as I'm concerned it'll eventually sort itself out just like it did on Reddit. It'll just take time to establish which communities are the largest. Eventually people will stop posting/subscribing to the communities that don't have as many people, and the largest one(s) will win out, just like they did on Reddit. This is an issue that requires patience. In the meantime, subscribe to them all and post to the one that has the most subscribers just like you would on Reddit if there wasn't a clear central community.
Oh man, this just reminded me that I still have a few weird remindme bot comments I made for like 5-10 years down the line. Ah well, when Reddit is a backwater nothing I'll probably login years from now and find a bunch of weird alerts from the remindme bot.
I'm actually having a lot of fun watching this place grow! It feels like a smaller community, but I've watched it expand so fast in the past week. Now that we've surpassed 100,000 people it feels like we've reached the point of it having enough mass that it can sustain itself. Once we reach a million I really think we'll start getting more attention and at around 10 million we'll be approaching terminal velocity. People on Reddit have been wanting a good alternative, but are just afraid of losing the large community vibe. It's going to take time, but this week has felt like hope.
Aaron Swartz will always be the real spiritual founder of what Reddit was at its best for me. Huffman will be the fool that didn't understand the ethos of it and drove it into the ground in his greed.
Okay, so think of every website that is part of the "Fediverse" (aka uses "ActivityPub") as just being different ways to display the exact same data. Sometimes their data works really well between two of them and sometimes it's a bit more awkward. Lemmy and Kbin are both trying to imitate the "forum-style" software that Reddit uses, so they integrate really well with each other. Same data, slightly different UI. Mastodon, on the other hand is imitating Twitter. So trying to read Mastodon in Lemmy is like trying to read a Twitter feed as Reddit threads. It's messier. Kbin seems to be trying to find a way to better display Mastodon-style threads within their UI. Otherwise, I think the big picture way to understand the difference is just that it's a matter of UI and which one you prefer more.
My grandma fell for a scammer that was pretending to be one of her grandchildren stuck in a jail in Mexico over a mixup. No AI voice or anything, just an actor and a vulnerable 90+ year old woman. She sent the scammer $10,000. I cannot fucking begin to imagine what AI is going to do to the scamming industry.