No, thanks for suggesting. I saw a thread by other curious users and checked fediseer. Might be an admin issue, but I didn’t see clear evidence.
Don’t think it was spam as, unless I’m misunderstanding, that seems unlikely from fosstodon.
No, thanks for suggesting. I saw a thread by other curious users and checked fediseer. Might be an admin issue, but I didn’t see clear evidence.
Don’t think it was spam as, unless I’m misunderstanding, that seems unlikely from fosstodon.
Pseudo?
I meant that it’s not directly associated with you as the owner through your migrated account.
Edited comment (many to some).
This isn’t an absolute rule. Of course they don’t (and shouldn’t) ask for feedback before cutting off Nazi instances, but it’s not always so clear.
.world defederated from fosstodon and I’m still unsure why.
What you’re describing sounds closer to how atproto is supposed to work, but it’s yet unproven in regards to decentralization.
I agree with the overall spirit, but this is a bit shallow, no? Not much of an attempt to argue its points. It makes some claims, refuses to elaborate, then leaves. Feels written for people who already think the same.
Because of this as well as poor financial management, Cohost will pass out of internet culture with little impact
Would decentralization have helped it make a much greater impact? Would it have helped Cohost survive? Seems to me that financial issues would’ve killed it regardless.
Your content stays behind, though, and some shut down without warning.
Your posts will not be moved, due to technical limitations.
Wait, when have I ever denied any genocide?
I’m sorry, that’s hilarious. It’s so odd, so absurd I can’t help but laugh.
I’ve disagreements of my own, but all I want is to put them aside for a bit because this sentence deserves appreciation.
We also need more straightforward installation procedures so more people can host their own.
Hosting your own instance is not a fire and forget operation. The closest thing is single-user instances, but even then there are matters the admin must handle. Plus, there’s little incentive for doing all this work.
Awesome stuff. Maybe there’s still hope for a non WebKit, Blink, or Gecko browser in the Servo project after all.
Fair point, thanks for sharing. Does that mean you consider fine the use of Zulip by open source development teams? Seeing as their main objective is providing organized chat between core contributors (with some level of outsider participation), that is, generally focused on facilitating the work of the project instead of building a community.
If you’re willing, I’d appreciate more information on this claim:
Don’t waste your time with Zulip, it is just another corporate messenger.
I tried looking it up myself, but I didn’t see anything that bad. Open source, self-hostable, Apache 2 licensed, didn’t see any CLA. About the Element thing, that sounds a bit far-fetched, but I’ll refrain from saying anything else since I haven’t had time to look into it. The Freenode story sounds interesting though, I’ll try looking it up later.
Thanks, I’m going through some of it right now, since I do prefer to be aware of this stuff. Far as I can see, though, he just seems like another opinionated person—not really noteworthy for a developer—who happens to write strongly, and write a lot. While this led to a larger virtual profile, most of his opinions that I’ve seen were shared, at least in part, with stray lobsters/reddit/hackernews comments.
He has ideas I agree with, ones I don’t, some that I think make him look silly… so he’s just another person on the internet, kinda like you and me. Could, maybe, use a better tone sometimes. As long as his controversial status is limited to the level of tech nerds ranting at each other, there’s not much to be warned about. I think we need to be more open towards earnestly discussing certain topics—sometimes it’s not drama, it’s just a serious conversation you haven’t needed to have until now.
Well, those are my two cents. Thanks, regardless.
P.S. huh, subscribers of opensource did not appreciate this post much. Maybe this is what happens when you cross-post “old” news.
Glad he brought up Discord’s quality.
I’m a bit tired of people saying e-mail/IRC work just fine. Yes, they do, but that’s not the point. Discord works better for way over a hundred millions users, many of whom rarely ever send mail and aren’t interested in learning how IRC or whatever alternative you use works.
It’s like instead of collaborating to solve this issue half of the open source community decided they want to die in IRC, while the other half just straight up gave up. Metaphorically. I get why, but it saddens me a little.
Will have to check out Zulip later.
In theory, I doubt development would continue. For a federated cohost to survive long term, it would also need to be open source, with a developer community that could fork the project and carry the torch. That’s a very different cohost we’re envisioning, even excluding required UX changes to make it possible.
At that point, one might as well imagine a cohost that explored better ways to make money, or attracted more users, or ran a tighter ship. Both scenarios lead to this discussion never happening.