That’s a bit like saying “Yeah so we don’t care what reddit does, because you can always go somewhere else”
It’s the biggest instance, so it’s where most of the community and content would be etc etc.
Just like what happened with beehaw could happen to world as well. This is only true for a mature decentralized federated ecosystem with a lot of redundant communities so that if one goes down you can easily consume the same content from a different instence. Is that the case now? I would say no, so it’s even less leader-proof.
There is certainly the risk of a single instance dominating. But even now there are a few significant instances and losing beehaw didn’t ruin anything.
Why so doom-and-gloom already? We just moved from Reddit and peope are excited about the possibilities that fediverse brings. Which are undeniably much broader when compared to Reddit.
Of course we don’t know what is going to happen in the future, but this model certainly has better chances of being run “by the people for the people”.
I don’t care that the admins of lemmy.world money make a business out of it. In fact I would be glad if they did.
Having said that they know perfectly well what happend to Reddit when the company wanted to become more authoritarian. And we are talking about people jumping ship from Reddit to fediverse which is way big of a deal than people jumping from one instance to another which, once you are versed and familiar with how fediverse works, is child play.
My point is that the only business to make with fediverse is the one that servers the users, that is, a “CEO” or a collective will have no option but deeply care what the users want and need to make some bucks. Otherwise this enterprise can collaps really quickly when people jump to another instance.
That’s a bit like saying “Yeah so we don’t care what reddit does, because you can always go somewhere else”
It’s the biggest instance, so it’s where most of the community and content would be etc etc. Just like what happened with beehaw could happen to world as well. This is only true for a mature decentralized federated ecosystem with a lot of redundant communities so that if one goes down you can easily consume the same content from a different instence. Is that the case now? I would say no, so it’s even less leader-proof.
Lemmy is perfectly fine with beehaw defederating.
There is certainly the risk of a single instance dominating. But even now there are a few significant instances and losing beehaw didn’t ruin anything.
Why so doom-and-gloom already? We just moved from Reddit and peope are excited about the possibilities that fediverse brings. Which are undeniably much broader when compared to Reddit.
Of course we don’t know what is going to happen in the future, but this model certainly has better chances of being run “by the people for the people”.
I don’t care that the admins of lemmy.world money make a business out of it. In fact I would be glad if they did.
Having said that they know perfectly well what happend to Reddit when the company wanted to become more authoritarian. And we are talking about people jumping ship from Reddit to fediverse which is way big of a deal than people jumping from one instance to another which, once you are versed and familiar with how fediverse works, is child play.
My point is that the only business to make with fediverse is the one that servers the users, that is, a “CEO” or a collective will have no option but deeply care what the users want and need to make some bucks. Otherwise this enterprise can collaps really quickly when people jump to another instance.