It will be an interesting time for sure. I hope it can work out in a way that skilled moderators can be compensated for their efforts. It seems like donation-supported instances for niche communities isn’t too unrealistic right now, though that doesn’t solve the volunteer labor problem. Cleverer things will probably become possible as the technology improves.
If the community server makes enough money, the mods could definitely be paid for their time. Reddit’s rules don’t apply on the Fediverse :)
On the corporate side this also leads to interesting options as well. For example imagine if Microsoft sets up an official instance run by their employees for Windows support and questions. Everyone could participate easily on the instance using their Fediverse accounts and Microsoft pays for the server/moderators.
Well it’s certainly a question of scale. I’ve seen some successful indie projects where the hosting costs are met by donations, but that’s usually when the admin/dev(s) are donating their labor. I struggle to imagine a community that could crowdfund enough for a few reasonable salaries on top of hosting costs.
Though my imagination isn’t particularly strong, so I would be delighted if such a thing came to be!
The last I want after all this is corporations to come and try to take over or spread ads and marketing everywhere. Sure, it will probably happen anyway, but I‘m gonna go to some instance that defederates from them.
I would definitely defederate if they advertise all over the place, like how I would ban them from my subreddit if they go and spam it. But if their staff stay on their own server (again think of it like being an official subreddit) to run an official forum I would be happy to federate with them so I can ask for technical support etc.
Instance based communities sound really interesting until it comes to the matter of an instance needing to be shut down. I hope the portability factor of Lemmy gets better, because that’s an easy way to lose tons of valuable informarion.
The information won’t necessarily be lost, because most/all? the instances that were previously federated with the shut-down instance should have cached copies of its activity. Not sure on what scale, or how far back, content caching will be, but I imagine admins have (or should have) the ability to configure that sort of thing
Now, from the perspective of a user looking to migrate to a new platform, not being able to “take it with you” is a valid concern. Mastodon seems to have account export nailed down, but lemmy/kbin are still pretty new and might need time to implement something like this
Some of the /r/ExperiencedDevs mods are running the programming.dev instance and most Star Trek-related subreddits moved to startrek.website, so it’s already happening.
I will be thrilled if we end up with some experienced Reddit mods running communities or instances of their own.
I would welcome them to mod my community with open arms ! I hope we see some of them come over
It will be an interesting time for sure. I hope it can work out in a way that skilled moderators can be compensated for their efforts. It seems like donation-supported instances for niche communities isn’t too unrealistic right now, though that doesn’t solve the volunteer labor problem. Cleverer things will probably become possible as the technology improves.
If the community server makes enough money, the mods could definitely be paid for their time. Reddit’s rules don’t apply on the Fediverse :)
On the corporate side this also leads to interesting options as well. For example imagine if Microsoft sets up an official instance run by their employees for Windows support and questions. Everyone could participate easily on the instance using their Fediverse accounts and Microsoft pays for the server/moderators.
Well it’s certainly a question of scale. I’ve seen some successful indie projects where the hosting costs are met by donations, but that’s usually when the admin/dev(s) are donating their labor. I struggle to imagine a community that could crowdfund enough for a few reasonable salaries on top of hosting costs.
Though my imagination isn’t particularly strong, so I would be delighted if such a thing came to be!
The last I want after all this is corporations to come and try to take over or spread ads and marketing everywhere. Sure, it will probably happen anyway, but I‘m gonna go to some instance that defederates from them.
I would definitely defederate if they advertise all over the place, like how I would ban them from my subreddit if they go and spam it. But if their staff stay on their own server (again think of it like being an official subreddit) to run an official forum I would be happy to federate with them so I can ask for technical support etc.
Fair enough. I filtered out corpos from Reddit too, while others might like or use these subs. To each their own.
Instance based communities sound really interesting until it comes to the matter of an instance needing to be shut down. I hope the portability factor of Lemmy gets better, because that’s an easy way to lose tons of valuable informarion.
The information won’t necessarily be lost, because most/all? the instances that were previously federated with the shut-down instance should have cached copies of its activity. Not sure on what scale, or how far back, content caching will be, but I imagine admins have (or should have) the ability to configure that sort of thing
Now, from the perspective of a user looking to migrate to a new platform, not being able to “take it with you” is a valid concern. Mastodon seems to have account export nailed down, but lemmy/kbin are still pretty new and might need time to implement something like this
Some of the /r/ExperiencedDevs mods are running the programming.dev instance and most Star Trek-related subreddits moved to startrek.website, so it’s already happening.
That’s already the case, e.g. lemmy.dbzer0.com
I’ve been trying to attract other reddit mods as well but success has not been great
Speaking for myself, I’m enjoying the break!
I think the r/piracy mod already did this with lemmy