this post was submitted on 29 Sep 2023
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Lemmy
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Everything about Lemmy; bugs, gripes, praises, and advocacy.
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Maybe I'm misremembering the original "marketing" about it, but at least Lemmy has this to say:
That's a lie, you can only access content that is federated with you, and there's a complex set of relationships between instances where you will always be missing some portion of the fediverse (i.e. if C blocks A, and C posts to B, users from A don't see that content on B, but users from B do).
So I'm not sure if it was siloed by design, but Lemmy was designed to replace Reddit, so presumably the same notion of what Reddit means (people congregate into communities, instead of instances) is implied:
But I obviously can't say for certain whether the original intention was to make tons of Reddit alternatives that all kind of connect to eachother, or to make a centralized Reddit alternative that is decentralized to prevent any one node disappearing from wrecking the network. If the former, I don't really understand the point, and if the latter, I think it's the wrong architecture.
Regardless, it's better than Reddit, so I stick around. I assume the same is true for Mastodon and Facebook.
I mean, I wasn't here a decadeo ago or so when the groundwork of the Fediverse was being laid, so I don't know how it was originally "marketed", but people make things without understanding the true implications of their decisions all of the time. And the current crop of leading products in the fediverse are a generation or three removed from the original designers.
People build on top of stuff with goals that are off-target of the original goals of tech. Building a bunch of square pegs and ramming them through round holes just, ultimately, results in those pegs either not slipping through, or having their corners cut off.
Yup, that's the way FOSS goes. Build what interests you, and make mistakes along the way.
Eventually the community seems to arrive at a decent solution though.
I'm really interested in working on a project that makes a proper decentralized Reddit/Twitter.
Have you heard of Lime Reader?
I don't really know the specifics but it's a different approach to decentralized reddit but it kind of came too late to get exodus traction.
Do you know how it works under the hood? I didn't see an obvious git repo in the few minutes I looked around.
I actually just started hacking on my own because I noticed a library I want to use (Iroh) finally has a release with decent documentation and a relevant example. The main idea is that each app install would help host the data, support searches, etc, so there's no single point of failure, or any real requirement for people to host larger instances (maybe just some relay hosting).
I'm guessing there are several floating around, but I figured I might as well try my own to at least get familiar with the library.
I'm afraid I don't. If you don't mind venturing to reddit the creator is fairly active on /r/redditalternatives.