Having said that, is it really the end of the world if large Lemmy instances have ads to make up for any shortfall in donations? Otherwise, how are large instances expected to be sustainable long term, especially if they’re going to ever reach the kinds of traffic Reddit sees?

  • Vinegar@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    It’s good that this discussion keeps coming up; federated instances are not meant to get so large. Once communities become too large they lose cohesion and culture, invariably they eventually sacrifice users’ well-being for practical purposes like funding, and at that point they become no better than the platforms they replaced. The cycle of exploitation continues.

    There are communities online that have preserved their community culture and have not resorted to unethical practices to maintain themselves for more than 20 years, they are always smaller more intentional communities that value quality interactions over quantity of users. Given all the evidence showing how mentally and socially harmful large centralized platforms are - should we really aspire to recreate those unhealthy spaces in the fediverse?

    The fediverse is an opportunity to take things a different direction, a direction in which smaller more cohesive communities share with each other without any one community dominating and suffocating the others. Federation is a fundamentally different model that challenges the centralizing paradigm “growth is good”.

    • density@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      do we really have evidence that the problems with a lot of mainstream social media has to do with size? there are shitty smaller sites like for example kiwifarms was vile but not very big. And other sites are expansive like linkedin or quora but pretty benign (if boring) AFAIK.

      A lot of people who are comfortable with tech have a hard time remembering how unusual that is. We are all clustered together with each other so it becomes normalized. But think of all the facebook, tik tok, reddit, instagram users int he world. Who will run services for them?

      It’s all well and good for us nerdy types to say “OK, one out of every few hundred of us is going to run a little server”. And we can support that because the % of people who have the skills and resources is extremely high.

      For the rest of the population, who is going to put the kind of community cultivation in to setting things up, convincing people to move, orienting users, etc? If this plan was to be viable it would need to have a small army of volunteers to commit to creating instances for specific communities far outside of tech.

    • kalfa@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      i overall agree.

      one point i struggle agreeing / see what you mean is small instances mean small communities.

      I’m on lemmy.ml, but i use lemmy as federated, i don’t see the lemmy.ml community when on lemmy, but the fediverse.

      in a way I don’t care on what instance i am.

      i come from a distributed systems background and to ne this is normal.

      is that anti fediverse?

      • shagie@programming.dev
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        1 year ago

        It depends on how… thematic local is.

        On programming.dev, local is almost entirely things that are interesting to me. Some I’m less interested about (new version of emacs released), but everything else is stuff I’d possibly read.

        If I was more into Star Trek, then startrek.website would be the place to be as everything in local there is Star Trek related.

        When you get to a general instance, local is less cohesive and it is more people who picked a server rather than people who picked that server.

        This also means that discovery of new content that is likely of interest is more challenging.

        Two of the primary concerns for picking a server are ease of content discovery and confidence in server administration.