Both were down for me before, they seem to be up right now but just made this account on Lemmy.blahaj.zone (Henry is the name of my actual blahaj lol). It’s probably because of the traffic influx from reddit refugees from the absolutely disastrous spez ama (where he doubles down on everything and doesn’t apologize at all). Allegedly they’re trying to suppress Lemmy mentions but I guess it’s not working well enough lol

A good problem to have although long term we’re going to have to figure out how to deal with these spikes in traffic.

  • honk@feddit.de
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    1 year ago

    I personally belief that regional instances are the way to go.

    And at some point we also gotta think about how to organize the instances…legally, financially and technically. For now I’m really happy at how the instance I’m on is run. But to be fair. I have no clue who is running it. I have no clue wether I’m going to agree with future decisions. I don’t even know if it will be around next week. Maybe the owner just decides he has more important things in life to do (which is fair tbh).

    The model that lemmy is based on gives us all the tools to organize instances however we want to. I really want to see community owned instances. Here in Germany social non profit clubs are a thing. You can officially register them and there are laws, regulations that protect them from just being taken over. They have boards that get elected by the members on a regular basis. I think that could be a great model on how to run an instance that is truly owned by its members.

    I’m sure there are similar models of organization in other countries too.

    • eodc@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      I think a barrier to wide-spread adoption of lemmy is that for a regular joe, the instance system is a bit confusing. I’m seeing a lot of people comparing the instances to email servers, but I think something they’re missing is that there are a few large email providers which most people default to (e.g. gmail, yahoo, etc.) and a bunch of smaller ones which people go to if they disagree with the policies of the larger ones (e.g. protonmail)

      I think that if lemmy is to replace reddit as the most widely-used link aggregator, we need some kind of default server (or set of default servers) which is large enough that people feel comfortable with settling in on. That way user base growth isn’t hindered by confusion. If they later decide that a smaller instance suits their needs better (whether that be the moderation practices or site reliability), they can uproot and move their account there.

      • honk@feddit.de
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        1 year ago

        I do agree with that. This is definitely a barrier of entry. But you can’t really completely get rid of it without taking away what makes lemmy what it is: A federated network and it’s integral to what it is trying to acheive.

        What I do believe you can do is mitigate it. “Default servers” could be part of that. Again I can only advocate for regional servers. In the bigger countries you can make that based on a 1 default server per state or region/province level. In smaller countries even one instance per country might be enough. People would automatically be on an instance that is uses their native language. You could also kinda slowly introduce them to the idea of federation like that: “This is the instance for your country. But you can also explore other countries and interact with their people”.

        Somebody could create a landing page to automatically pick an instance for a user based on what language their system is set to and their IP adress. A German user goes to the website and gets to pick the state they live in. They are getting suggested a server that correlates to whatever state they picked.

        Obviously for now it would be overkill to create an instance for every single state. But hopefully we will get there.

        • possum
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          1 year ago

          Right now the recommended instances on join-lemmy.org are actually based on your system language, so we’re halfway there.

        • eodc@lemm.ee
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          To be honest I feel like even that’s too complicated. Most people don’t really care about the great technology behind the product; they just want a product that works. That’s in part why the current large social media networks are so large; registration is so easy. The moment you add friction in the form of learning how federation works, normal users will become jaded and just decide not to join the network. If the goal right now is to improve the network effect offered by lemmy, we need to do as much as possible to minimize the amount of people we turn away.

          This isn’t to say that we should focus completely on the “default instances”. I agree that ultimately the goal should be to have people move to smaller instances which take advantage of more of lemmy’s wider philosophy. But I think that the first step should be to introduce people to the concept of the fediverse, and then have them interact with it as intended.

      • Acetamide@lemmy.world
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        I think that with the growing popularity of Lemmy and kbin the registration process will naturally become more intuitive over time. Especially on the short term I expect a lot of tweaking to happen.

        • eodc@lemm.ee
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          Im honestly not so sure about the “more intuitive over time” part. I feel like a lot of people who are using lemmy currently are already pretty technically inclined, and they’re already mildly confused as to how accounts work. If that’s the case, imagine how a normal person feels. I don’t think we can rely on things getting smoothed out over time if we’re to maximize the short-term intake of users caused by the reddit exodus.

      • cstine@lemmy.uncomfortable.business
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        1 year ago

        In regards to email; the reason people use one of the large providers is that the large providers have taken malicious and aggressive steps to break the ability of smaller providers to talk to them, in the name of “security”.

        It’s not a ‘natural state of being’ : up until relatively recently you could easily run your own email server (and most businesses and huge numbers of people actually did), but it’s been co-opted and broken very thoroughly by Google and Microsoft to their benefit.

        With the Fediverse, you probably don’t actually want giant servers, as you’re just repeating the concentration of users and thus power in the network into a smaller, fewer set of hands.

        • eodc@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          With the Fediverse, you probably don’t actually want giant servers, as you’re just repeating the concentration of users and thus power in the network into a smaller, fewer set of hands.

          I’m of the opinion that it’s ok and natural for a few larger servers to emerge. The reason why I think it’s natural is because normal people frankly don’t care about the nuanced benefits about finding an instance that caters to their exact moderation preferences or philosophical pontifications about why Big Tech is bad. They just want to click on funny images, upvote them, and maybe comment once in a while.

          I think that’s ok since I believe the ultimate goal of social media sites is to serve content for users’ consumption in a non-abusive way. The reason why I believe the fediverse is probably better than traditional social media is because it gives the power of choice. That power doesn’t need to be executed, but because it’s baked into the platform the users always have the ability to exercise it. If a large instance decides to screw over its users, then the users can simply move to another instance and still have full access to the network’s content. That power alone is what makes me ok with having few large instances.

          • cstine@lemmy.uncomfortable.business
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            1 year ago

            I think the differing view here is ‘natural growth’ vs ‘forced growth’.

            I don’t think large servers that come by being large because they’re the preferred choice for a given community, topic, reliability, or whatever other criteria become valuable are bad.

            I think setting it up so that a new user is told ‘You go here, and you sign up on this instance.’ and writing all the onboarding stuff to direct them to the mega-instance for the sake of convenience because we can’t figure out how to make it simpler or more clear or explain how federation works isn’t the right path.

            I will admit I do not have a fantastic answer on how to explain to someone who has limited technical knowledge exactly WHY federation is the way to go for communication and that the instance you should pick relies almost exclusively on the reliability of the service (is it fast? does it stay running? is it going to exist in six months?) and the trustworthiness of the admin (are they someone who you can deal with in terms of moderation? do you trust they’re not going to use their access to violate any trusts or behave in a way contrary to your beliefs?).

            I’m old enough that my first foray into ‘federated’ content was Fidonet, and which BBS you called ‘home’ and posted from was almost exclusively a decision based on the local BBS community and the sysop because the messages and software were otherwise exactly the same from BBS to BBS.

            So, my bias is that large instances can’t be close communities and that larger instances require different and more aggressive and impersonal moderation and the bigger you get the more true both become.

            • eodc@lemm.ee
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              I think the term “forced growth” is a bit unfairly pejorative. Using “force” as a foil to “natural” has the connotation that encouraging people to register and participate by making the process easier is somehow unnatural. Making things easier is what I’m suggesting and it seems like you’re calling that kind of growth “forced”. I’m not suggesting that we make a bunch of fake accounts a la early Reddit to make Lemmy seem more active. We’re not registering the complete number of naturally appearing curious users, and I see that as a problem.

              I think setting it up so that a new user is told ‘You go here, and you sign up on this instance.’ and writing all the onboarding stuff to direct them to the mega-instance for the sake of convenience because we can’t figure out how to make it simpler

              By “make it simpler”, I’m taking you to mean “making the process of finding an instance and registering on that instance so the user can interact with Lemmy simpler”. We both agree that the federated nature of Lemmy is a good thing. But inherent in the federated nature of Lemmy is that there are many instances; whoever wants to interact with Lemmy will need to settle on a home instance. To settle on a home instance, they first need to find an instance.

              What I’m suggesting is that the process of finding an instance already introduces too much friction when someone doesn’t already know what an instance is and how instances interact with each other on the network. Making it simpler, in my opinion, must either consist in explaining what an instance is and how instances interact with each other in at most a sentence, or giving new users a default instance so they don’t have to think about it immediately.

              • cstine@lemmy.uncomfortable.business
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                1 year ago

                Agreed, and that’s my basic point: we need to convey why an instance matters and provide a good way for someone to make an easy choice.

                I wonder if something like what social media sites do in general might help: we let you pick a couple of interests, and you get a list of a small handful of vetted servers (who agree to something like Mastodon’s Server Covenant) to be funneled into. Like, instead of a list of 150, you get… 3.

                Interests may not even be the right thing; maybe server policies and permitted subjects and moderation policies should be what’s asked, idk. But something that filters the numerous servers to a more vetted list without defaulting to just picking a big few feels like a more organic fix.

                I also think the way content is federated right now is utterly confusing, but that feels more like a UI/UX problem that’s fixable than anything else. Server admins may be well served by picking a handful of big communities and federating without any user intervention just so that the basics are populated rather than requiring the users to find and pick communities one by one to federate, as well. The blank slate you get now is very offputting, even IF you know what you’re doing and how to go do it.

                • eodc@lemm.ee
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                  1 year ago

                  Glad we’re in agreement :D

                  Yeah, I think having something like an “interest matcher” of sorts on join-lemmy.org would be good.

        • eodc@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          the reason people use one of the large providers is that the large providers have taken malicious and aggressive steps to break the ability of smaller providers to talk to them, in the name of “security”.

          This is just a false statement; I can email my friends on GMail just fine from my Protonmail account. I think you’re meaning to characterize malicious methods to keep people on the platform, but that issue is orthogonal to getting people registered.

          The issue Lemmy has right now is getting normal people registered.

          • cstine@lemmy.uncomfortable.business
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            Protonmail is one of the larger providers of email at this point.

            If you were to set up your own SMTP server and try to deliver mail, you essentially cannot reliably email any of the larger providers, because they’ve taken steps to mitigate spam and issues which also makes it impossible to handle your own email anymore, even if the intent wasn’t explicitly to break self-hosting.

            If you concentrate everyone into larger providers, you’re allowing them the ability to gatekeep who can and cannot talk to their users, and most people will either not understand this, or be happy to allow it.

            I will admit to some bias in not trusting there to be a ‘central’ server that’s run and maintained with the good of the community in mind because there are endless, endless examples of situations where the owners/maintainers of a service have decided to take actions that are fundamentally against their users best interests - which, of course, is probably why anyone is actually here discussing this in the first place.

            Could onboarding be improved? Absolutely. But I really don’t think the solution is to have a small handful of blessed instances and try to push everyone to them.

            • eodc@lemm.ee
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              If you were to set up your own SMTP server and try to deliver mail, you essentially cannot reliably email any of the larger providers, because they’ve taken steps to mitigate spam and issues which also makes it impossible to handle your own email anymore, even if the intent wasn’t explicitly to break self-hosting.

              But this isn’t true either? I can easily spin up a SMTP server on a homelab, create an MX record, and email my friends with Gmail accounts as if I was emailing from my Protonmail or Gmail account.

              I appreciate you acknowledging your bias against central providers, but to be honest I think it’s leading to some incorrect conclusions. This discussion is also kind of getting derailed, but I’d be happy to continue debating about it.

              • cstine@lemmy.uncomfortable.business
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                1 year ago

                Interesting; my general experience (and that of customers I spent time working with doing support for various cloud providers) was that you could, theoretically do so, but ‘sending the email to a provider’ and ‘the provider accepts it and delivers it’ were not always the same thing.

                Microsoft was especially bad in that it would accept the message, and give you the standard SMTP ‘message accepted’ response but then silently just drop it in the backend, never to be seen again. Didn’t go to spam, didn’t land in a filter just… vanished.

                Google, at least, had the decency to tell you when it was going to reject your email, but still.

                It was always the same dance: you need a PTR, an SPF record, DKIM, etc. but at the end of the day, Google and Microsoft absolutely gatekeep what gets delivered to their platform, so if it’s critical that your email shows up reliably every time, you have to move into the “ecosystem” of ESPs and all the hoops that are involved there if you want your message to go to the ‘big providers’.

                • eodc@lemm.ee
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                  1 year ago

                  That’s unfortunate, sorry you had that experience. I’m not quite sure how to continue this conversation now since I think now all I can offer are anecdotes which aren’t very productive

    • wintermute@feddit.de
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      Here in Germany social non profit clubs are a thing. You can officially register them and there are laws, regulations that protect them from just being taken over. They have boards that get elected by the members on a regular basis. I think that could be a great model on how to run an instance that is truly owned by its members.

      If someone wants to go ahead, count me in.

    • 𝒍𝒆𝒎𝒂𝒏𝒏@lemmy.one
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      I personally belief that regional instances are the way to go

      This is pretty much how I sign up to stuff in the Fediverse. Since I’m in Europe I look for any of the closest english-speaking instances with a local CCTLD and sign up there - however this time I decided against it because I couldn’t figure out who operated lemmy org uk (my preferred instance before it disappeared). Ended up joining lemmy.one instead and happy with that decision!

    • Acetamide@lemmy.world
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      There are a lot of instances popping up at the moment and we’ll see many of them disappear again over the coming weeks. Prepare to move around a bit before things stabilise somewhat.