Ante Vukorepa 

@orcinus@infosec.exchange
40 Followers
107 Following
206 Posts
Gadgetfreak extraordinaire, sci-fi fan, photographer, journalist and EE student... troll-like, toll-free...
Instagramhttps://instagram.com/photorcinus/
Twitterhttps://twittodon.com/share.php?t=orcinus&m=orcinus@infosec.exchange
Githubhttps://github.com/orcinus
@Chron And Musk.
@nonlinear @phpete All of this has happened before, and all of this will happen again. Every time it’s a little bit more painful, not because or any significant difference in the progression, but because you keep telling yourself ”maybe it’ll be different next time”.

@nonlinear @phpete This isn't the first period of massive online societal upheaval and uncertainty. These things come in waves. Every time it happens, there's a period of uncertainty and fuzzyness, until things recrystalize into communities again.

Online societies are not communities, but they eventually form communities, until they grow too big, become a target for exploatation, and inevitably turn to shit.

And so the wheel turns.

@phpete @nonlinear You left twitter, but your interactions there haven’t changed? :)
@benjaminallocco It’s a bit like walking up to a random house on fire saying ”is now a good time to admit i never lived here” - totally irrelevant to anything :)

Sub Rehab - See where reddit communities have relocated to

https://lemmy.world/post/297531

Sub Rehab - See where reddit communities have relocated to - Lemmy.world

Found this on a reddit post. If someone has created an alterante to a reddit community you can post submit the link there. This might help with activity.

What’s that? You want #reddit’s message to mods (https://www.theverge.com/2023/6/16/23763538/reddit-blackout-api-protest-mod-replacement-threat) translated into Ork?

Here ya’ go

Here’s the note Reddit sent to moderators threatening them if they don’t reopen

Reddit is messaging moderators of communities that closed to protest its API changes. It says anyone “hindering” reopening can be replaced with someone willing to bring the subreddit back online.

The Verge

The members here now are least likely to want a centralized instance.

The July 1st influx will be similar.

Future waves from other FU's will get progressively less techie and more likely to see federated communities as meaning that "this is STILL not ready as a drop-in replacement??".

That said, I joined reddit so long ago that people looked at me cross-eyed when I tried to explain sub-reddits. You would think that something analogous to sections of a newspaper wouldn't be THAT difficult to grasp, yet here we are with people freaking out that now it's basically just saying we have different sections of different newspapers.

"Yes, Virginia, there is a Technology section at 2 different newspapers. You might even come to appreciate being able to get 2 different slants on the same topics."

"No, you don't have to live in a city to subscribe to their newspaper. It's really not much tougher than mailing someone in another city and you do that already."

The truth is that most people, even those who have been burned repeatedly by centralization, won't appreciate that it's worth modest effort to avoid it until there is at least one very large Lemmy instance that gets its Zuck / Elon / Spez.

@dhork @Contextual_Idiot He wants eyeballs on ads, not content. Like most VC techbros, he thinks content is the easy part of the equation, and people creating content are an easily replacable nuisance.
@Lorez @squaresinger But their business is… not working :D