Comment on [Lemmy Social] Join Lemmy istances/communities (share useful linksđ») | Fediverse
OpenStars@discuss.online âš2â© âšweeksâ© ago
For anyone in the USA, I highly recommend the Discuss.Online instance - it has a great server and admin team, as evidenced by its fantastic uptime stats, plus is quite welcoming to casual discussions. I bounced around a couple of different instances before making this one my primary home and have had zero regrets since.
Also if anyone wants to see a peek of whatâs coming up in the future, while itâs just shy of being fully ready for the masses yet, PieFed is an amazing project that will soon enough overtake Lemmy. It already has tons of features that Lemmy lacks - like Categories of Communities, hashtags, YouTube embedding, an absolute ton of customization options, and much more - even if there are a few still missing in reverse (like âsearchingâ for content, user account tagging, the ability to preview a message prior to sending, receipt of notifications is quite buggy⊠- for early adopters though, itâs almost fully functional, especially for someone experienced in knowing how to fall back to Lemmy when necessary).
There are lots of exciting things happening on the Fediverse lately!:-)
aeronmelon@lemmy.world âš2â© âšweeksâ© ago
I donât like the idea of saying this federated thing will overtake/be more important than that federated thing. If Piefed is doing it right, Piefed users will be able to see everything on Lemmy and Lemmy users will be able to see everything on Piefed.
Userâs choice should grant access to everything.
Federated networks are not competing with each other, theyâre cooperating with each other against siloâd, closed networks run by corporations. Or at least thatâs how it should be.
OpenStars@piefed.social âš2â© âšweeksâ© ago
I am responding to you from PieFed right now, so yes that works:-).
Sublinks plans to go even further and be backwards compatible with existing Lemmy databases, for conversion of current instances rather than having to spin up a new one fresh and thereby lose all the old content.
Mbin likewise ties in not only with Lemmy but with Mastodon as well (plus others such as Friendica but with varying degrees of success).
So I get what you are saying, I do, but also if some features - like hashtag support - aren't supported by all platforms, then the method of access can have such an enormous difference in terms of what "content" someone is able to access, even if staring at raw API calls from those various sources, that it seems to represent more than merely a method of access to the same material (imho at least).
More to the point, I meant that PieFed is written in Python (and Sublinks in Java iirc, and Mbin in PHP), whereas Lemmy written in Rust moves much more slowly ahead in terms of new features, as far fewer people know it.
Also the developers of Lemmy have a very noticeable bias towards authoritarianism that influences what the implementation is allowed to do - e.g. when a mod or admin removes content, there is no user notification nor any way to appeal that (as Reddit does with the modmail), and an entire post thereby disappears even for the users having deeper discussions no longer involving the OP, which end up getting squashed as well.
I doubt that will change even in the timeframe of several years, especially considering how a year ago Lemmy users were told that we would gain the ability to block users from an instance, which when the feature rolled out that only mutes communities but leaves all the trolls free to harass users on other instances that haven't dared to defederated from them. e.g. from Hexbear or even mods on Lemmy.ml, like that incident where the mod told a user âI hope you die soon.â, after saying that they - the mod - wanted to kill the user whose comment they had removed, over some trivial depiction of a kiss between people dating in a game. Yet to this day that same mod retains an account on that instance, protected by the admins and free to continue their pattern of abuse across the entire Fediverse. Moreover, "notifications" from instances that people choose to block used to be silenced, but then that protection was later *removed*, and to this day there remains no way in the Lemmy web UI to halt a barrage of messages from users that can continue for WEEKS and WEEKS (I'm not joking - this has happened to me, TWICE!), long after the person has lost interest in receiving such. (Tbf, some apps may provide that, I'm not sure, but I'm talking here about what "Lemmy" provides innately.)
TLDR: I've mostly given up on Lemmy - the platform I mean, not the users on it - to ever improve such matters. At which point I am pinning my hopes on PieFed, Mbin, and Sublinks moving forward, bc those "minor differences" in the codebase make ALL the difference in terms of avoidance of harassment i.e. the reception of the end user experience.