The Economist is also known for attempts at “wit” in some of their headlines. The title is surely riding the line of satire intentionally.
The Economist is also known for attempts at “wit” in some of their headlines. The title is surely riding the line of satire intentionally.
I was on Reddit for 17 years. It was my home on the Internet. I used to go to Reddit meetup days and hang out with other Reddit nerds. It’s natural for people to have sentimental feelings about something that’s been such a big part of so many of our lives.
I haven’t been back since the Lemmy exodus, except by accident a few times. But I miss what it was.
What even is your point? Does one protester’s desire for violence justify the Chinese government’s violence?
Man…it’s been years, so I don’t remember, but honestly it felt like it at the time. Everyone hated their massive V4 redesign, so people just…left. The Reddit situation is different, because it only really affected third-party app users, not every single user of the site.
Edit: I looked it up, and yeah, there was a “quit Digg day” on August 30, 2010 when pretty much everybody just left for Reddit and didn’t look back. It helped that people actively bombed Digg’s front page with links to Reddit that day, letting people know where to go. Two days later Digg’s CEO was ousted by the board, two months later they laid off 37% of their staff. They basically died overnight. That’s not happening to Reddit.
It’s worth noting that Reddit has been around a lot longer than Digg had at the time, and has way more traffic than Digg ever did. Unseating Reddit is going to be a lot harder than quitting Digg was.
17 years. Probably the only site other than Google I’ve visited almost every day since then. It’s extremely depressing to lose Reddit after all that time. But I’m enjoying Lemmy, and hoping we can grow it Digg-exodus-style.
Voyager (formally Wefwef) is doing this. You can favorite communities and it will push them to the top. It’s been useful for monitoring smaller communities.
What I do not understand about this take is that they can already collect all of this data, today. They don’t need to federate with the rest of the Fediverse to scrape basically all of the data they want. The only problematic thing they’d need an instance for is linking votes to users - which is something they could do just by spinning up a Lemmy instance. And they probably shouldn’t be able to, Lemmy should try to figure out a way to anonymize votes.
Threads joining the Fediverse does not significantly increase their ability to collect data about existing Fediverse denizens.
They already can access all if your data in the fediverse. They don’t need their own platform to do that.
Lemmy doesn’t support LDAP, OIDC, or anything like them yet, so at least as far as that goes sign-in can’t be easily unified.
There are tracking issues though:
https://github.com/LemmyNet/lemmy/issues/489
https://github.com/LemmyNet/lemmy/issues/1241
https://github.com/LemmyNet/lemmy/issues/1368
https://github.com/LemmyNet/lemmy/issues/2930
Soup spoons are round, whereas most other spoons (tea spoons, table spoons, dessert spoons) are oval or egg shaped.
Slashdot has had that (but for upvotes) for like 20 years, haha. It’s…mildly useful.
Valheim took 4 years to make.
I work in gamedev. Even with simple graphics, making a successful game generally takes a lot of time to make. It’s not just graphics. Design, writing, QA, art, console compliance, and a huge amount of engineering effort especially in multiplayer games. It takes time to get right. And we’ve all seen what happens when “AAA” games are released before they’re ready just because a bean counter said they had to.
The blockbuster hits with simple graphics that a solo dev made in a few months are the exception, not the rule.
Sure, but that means on social issues (like the trans rights) he is very “progressive”.