That said, I would like to say that despite the issues with the ML administration, I feel the centralization of communities on WORLD is a far greater and thus more urgent issue for me.
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I feel the centralization of communities on WORLD is a far greater and thus more urgent issue for me.
Is it? Is there any level of power tripping similar to lemmy.ml?
Also
I suggest to have one topic per comment so that is is easier to discuss.
It's not about power tripping, it's about philosophy. When I left mainstream social media and decided upon the Fediverse, decentralization was very much at the top of the list. I was happy to be part of a world where one corporation wasn't in control of our lives. I'm just uncomfortable with the way that people are so eager to foster that in world. We shouldn't have to see them misbehave before we apply what we learned from previous mistakes.
I’m just uncomfortable with the way that people are so eager to foster that in world. We shouldn’t have to see them misbehave before we apply what we learned from previous mistakes.
You're preaching to the choir, but "for now" it's acceptable to me.
We are always able to move communities to other instances should they misbehave, and that's good enough to me.
Could be improved, of course, but not critical.
I'm a little late on this thread/issue, but I agree with @[email protected] .
I'm also inclined to push back on the anti-lemmy.ml stance being pushed here. And to be clear, While I'm on lemmy.ml, I joined before "the migration" when it made sense to join the "main" instance as it then was and I have no particular affiliation with them or their politics.
Inline with what sabre is saying, I think there's a certain degree of political entitlement and "defederation-fever" creeping into this general sentiment. I think the communists/tankies should be allowed to do their thing without it being an issue, just like any other niche interest/viewpoint that can build a space here.
I suspect there's some dangerously presumptive politics at play here ... where moderation action is presumed to be "power tripping" mainly because the moderator's politics is presumed to be completely wrong. How about, "yea, that's their thing, it's unlikely something productive will come out of speaking flatly critically about china on lemmy.ml ... their moderation can go overboard sometimes, but their defensive about all of that ... if you want to do that, you'll need to go to a more western instance/community"
Building different spaces with different rules, vibes and beliefs, while simultaneously committing to inter-connectivity as much as possible ... is basically the idea of the fediverse. It allows us to talk to each other without being stuck in one group's (or corporation's) policies and world-view ... and more idealistically, allows us to see different world-views more clearly as we contrast the different spaces we can be connected to. If everything were on lemmy.world, it'd be hard to see the world-view (ha) that the mods/admins and even majority there impose on the rest.
That's the idealism, and I think it's very real.
But the pointy end of the stick is disagreements which lead to downvotes and moderation. That's what enables the creation of a particular space, and needs to just kinda be accepted a bit more.
That's the part not stated enough IMO ... at some point, if you're going to be committed to the inter-connectivity part, you need to be respectful of the fact that another space exists and can be antagonistic to some of your views. That's fine. On reddit, we'd just steer clear of a particular sub-reddit and maybe disparage them elsewhere. De-federation or targeting an instance as plain bad or wrong is a useful tool that the fediverse provides but which, IME, can easily become over zealously embraced in a sort of dog-pile behaviour. A more useful behaviour, IMO, is to try to work out ways that the fediverse can persist with such antagonism and disagreements.
Not being surprised that communists are hard on criticism of communist countries seems like a start to me (where, TBF, such criticism is pretty wide spread in the west to the point that I don't blame them for being cranky about it). Being open to the idea that you can get along with same communists on just about any other issue is a good next step. It'd be the same with criticising tech workers on programming.dev or trans/gender/queer issues on blahaj.zone or criticising western imperialism and capitalism on lemmy.world. Though I suspect the lemmy.ml admins could do a better job at sign-posting their politics/policies here.
These are spaces with particular sensitivities. Antagonising them indifferently is kinda rude at some point. Demanding that they not have their sensitivities is kinda against the fediverse at some point. Interestingly, the admin of lemmy.ml, dessalines, basically said the same thing recently.
Now, to be fair, I haven't looked into the moderation stuff that seems to have precipitated this conversation and I'm certainly open to the idea that the lemmy.ml mods overstepped (mods tend to do that IME). But my general view is that, as communists living in the west, they've probably come against a good amount superficial criticism and frankly prejudice that us general westerners wouldn't really notice, and so have pretty sharply guarded boundaries around that sort of dialogue. So they've built their own space (well platform actually), that is generally geared toward FOSS and privacy about which many of us have shared interests ... but they also have some pretty clear policies around communism that are clearly very personal to the admins that are better respected than exiled or antagonised.
Also, none of this is to say everything should be on lemmy.ml. Quite the opposite. Diversify! That's part of my point. But away from lemmy.world too, and with the understanding that part of diversification is enabling niche spaces that can cause friction and said friction isn't, in itself, a problem. Instead, IMO, we tend to get a bit feverish whenever these sorts of things spark up. Anyway ... rant over!
I feel the centralization of communities on WORLD is a far greater and thus more urgent issue for me.
It's definitely a big issue too and why it is a good idea to suggest people start alternatives somewhere other than l.w, as is being done in this discussion.
[email protected] would be perfect! @[email protected] can we make that happen?
Linux: [email protected]
[email protected] seems quite active, I guess if any people move to it it will become even more active.
[email protected] could probably be a nice one too if people want to avoid hypercentralization on LW
If you know any other, comment below and we can see which one we decide to select as "the one" to avoid fragmentation.
Privacy: [email protected]
[email protected] is a good one. The instance admin comes and go, but the instance is still up-to-date
Other active options:
I like [email protected] because the project is behind it
Whenever friends ask about resources, I always link them to the privacyguides website. I should use their community more as well
[email protected] also
Interesting, doesn't seem that active unfortunately, I guess the privacyguides one takes most of the posts besides the lemmy.ml one
Perhaps it's not as active as I'd assumed. I only semi-recently subscribed so mostly have the initial fetch.
Some more options for those looking.
Just had a look:
- [email protected]: site seems down? http://monero.house/
- [email protected]: last posts 4 hours and 9 days ago
- [email protected]: last post 4 days ago
- [email protected]: last post 11 days ago
- [email protected]: last post 3 hours and 8 hours ago
- [email protected]: site is down: https://community.nicfab.it/c/privacy
Added lemmy.ca and LW to the top comment
Open source: [email protected]
- [email protected] seems like a nice alternative (more subs than [email protected])
Seems like a community that has it's natural home at programming.dev.
Sorry if this is a bit off-topic, but I wanted to say that I see you going to such great efforts to help people all across the entire Fediverse, and to say thank you - we appreciate you!:-)
Thanks, trying to help!
Personal finance: [email protected]
There are a few country-based:
Maybe it makes more sense to have country-based communities?
Librewolf's official community is on ml sadly [email protected]
Might be worth to check with the team if they would mind moving to another instance.
I guess they didn't really check which instance their community was hosted on
Yes, I just posted over there that:
So if there’s an issue with lemmy.ml, boycott it - unsubscribe, give the other communities on more agreeable instances your time and they will grow and prosper. If there isn’t a relevant alternative start one.
And this is a key step - identify where there aren't alternatives and start them. It might also be worth compiling a list of the alternatives so people can make the switch.
It's also worth bearing in mind that Lemmy isn't like Reddit in that you could just passively consume content all day. If there's a problem, we all need to roll our sleeves up and pitch in.
Worth also mentioning that [email protected] is a good place to discuss topics on how we can help Lemmy grow and thrive.
Jellyfin: [email protected]
Maybe something for https://lemmy.dbzer0.com ?
Simple Living: [email protected]
[email protected] : "A community about happy living. Thoughts and praxis about long-term wellbeing, contentment, and personal fulfillment."
I think the problem is not so much that "communities don't exist", but that they are far less popular and active than the lemmy.ml ones, and when presented with a choice new users will typically choose the community that is more active and has the most subs. You can't simply solve that by creating another community on another instance. A concerted effort would be needed to get people to move and to get them to pick the alternative community over the lemmy.ml one. Raising awareness and defederation by bigger instances (like lemmy.world) would help immensely.
For me the big ones are [email protected] and [email protected] btw, which do exist elsewhere but the alternatives are stale.
I’m on .ml and have been considering making an account on another instance, but it seems like most major instances require an email. .ml did not require an email.
- [email protected] but it is a bit dead at the moment. Although as I've been the main poster it is clearly my fault or a dearth of news. I have tended to cross-posting to them both, so I may just focus on this one.