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by riceart
1107 days ago
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I dunno maybe I’m wrong about the technical stuff. My minor point is that this software has some technical flaws today - forums and link aggregators are solved problems over and over again so implementation excellence is at least a unique value proposition. I’ll quote the top-voted thread here >> Nobody wants a federated, slow, difficult to use version of reddit. Nobody wants to choose a server. > I want this. I want this because it's a sustainable way to have Reddit without the ads. The bad UX is an acceptable tradeoff for a platform that doesn't go to shit. I’m just not buying how a federated system of isolated instances solves this. What fundamentally prevents the dominant oligopoly or monopoly server(s) from just being Reddit running on Lemmy? Lemmy doesn’t dictate how things are run - so why won’t a major funded instance just evolve to a new Reddit?
How does Lemmy decisively get you to a Reddit without the ads? What stops a major Lemmy instance going to shit? Just having federation as an opt in feature doesn’t force the system to evolve in a particular way. If a “Voat” equivalent pops up it’s not like the dominant instances are going to federate with it. |
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A federated system of isolated instances doesn't solve it, because that's not a federated system. The point of federation is that the instances aren't isolated, and they're highly interchangeable. No major instance has the incentive to become a new Reddit, because it's so easy to switch instances at every level that they just don't have the moat to make that happen. It's exactly the same thing as an email provider going to shit, but even less problematic.
If a Voat instance pops up, sure, dominant instances won't federate with it. That's perfectly fine. It doesn't mean that the inter-federated dominant instances can get away with pulling a Reddit.
Federation is an opt-in feature in theory, but in practice, what's the value proposition for an instance to turn off federation today?
It's really quite simple. Without federation, there is an incentive to pull a Reddit. With federation, there is no longer an incentive to do so, because you don't have a moat. What do you think would happen if Reddit only had 1/2 of the subreddits anyone used and if you could keep access to all the same communities on a competitor?