We must ship what we said Disgusting, good thing I’m never coming back reddit. This is just the beginning of a long list of bad decisions, no wonder why Reddit is no longer profitable.
Reddit refugee chilling on beehaw
We must ship what we said Disgusting, good thing I’m never coming back reddit. This is just the beginning of a long list of bad decisions, no wonder why Reddit is no longer profitable.
Yes they are, kbin federates with Lemmy and mastodon
I’ll be watching this with interest, how far are both sides capable of going?
And for some reason everyone (most) is really friendly, I used to lurk a lot on Reddit, here I can actually chat with people.
Hopefully Lemmy will have a better search function than reddit, or good indexing from google.
It makes the servive inconvenient and annoying to use. I just want to watch the video, not watch a 60s ad that us totally irrelevant to me.
At first I thought this was a problem with Jerboa, but now I’m seeing it happen in the desktop website as well. Will post on [email protected].
Same on desktop, sometimes jerboa throws a timeout error.
Apparently disabling ipv6 should make it appear again.
I like the consistency! good job admins and @[email protected]!
Yeah it’s only temporary, they are on the process of moving to a bigger server
Yup, I made a mistake, the real amount is 23k, you can see the edit in the post.
So we can expect the mods of bigger subreddits to also lose their permissions? How will the admins manage to moderate 8k subs?
Is just reporting users on that instance, you can see fedia’s (another kbin instance) here http://fedia.io/stats.
Edit: After a quick chat with the dev group it seems you are correct, it’s just reporting the total users discovered
kbin.social currently has 20k + users. However is currently has federation disabled due to the traffic is receiving. Edit: It isn’t 100k
This is incredible, reddit will become unusable with all those ads everywhere, it will effectively kill all the discussion that they are trying to sell in that article.
It’s better if users spread out the load between instances.