What interface are you using now? I’m responding to this thread from kbin.social instance usin kbin webclient
What interface are you using now? I’m responding to this thread from kbin.social instance usin kbin webclient
Oh, ok. I thought it was because it’s mentioned in kbin.pub
Alright I thought the alpha version was already in google play store, so that’s why I wondered
I don’t think you get my point. I’m not advocating to relicense kbin code or make it closed. Everyone will always be free to fork and make their own kbin-like client if they’re unhappy with the original. I’m also not suggesting taking kbin off Fediverse.
Right now, I think only 1 person has complete power over the domain kbin.pub, and the git repository. So that is as centralized as it gets. Same thing with the kbin.social instance, but I’d like to keep administration of the kbin project sepatate from the kbin.social fediverse instance (both can live without the other). I’d like the current main kbin client project (the only?) to get proper administration and financing.
Bought him a coffee. See my other comment here though:
https://kbin.social/m/kbinMeta/t/109343/Kbin-Foundation-when#entry-comment-442458
kbin is just a bin of code that everyone can toss into, there is no singular domain to own.
There is kbin.pub and the main branch git. Just because forks can continue working if the main kbin git gets messed up, compromised or whatever, it doesn’t mean that the development wouldn’t be in serious trouble in the real life. It would be far from smooth
Having a foundation/non-profit is easy and virtually free of fees. Small-time hobbyist sports clubs of like 10 people often have a nonprofit to manage the (small) finances of the group where I live. Kbin has potential to be a very big player in the post-reddit times, with millions of users. I don’t know what ernest does for living but it wouldn’t take much money to pay him full-time for Kbin development, but that would be the kind of expenses I was thinking (and later small-time marketing)
Oh I see. Yeah, there could be a feature (a browser addon would work too) that reads the webpage meta data before opening it, and pops a “Open in kbin/lemmy/whatever?” window.