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Joined 2 years ago
Cake day: June 8th, 2023

  • They do have a history of removing threads and posts that get too popular though. I remember several incidents where highly upvoted comments and posts about Lemmy got removed for seemingly no reason.

    It’s probably impossible for them to entirely prevent discussion about Lemmy so they instead astroturf and try to manipulate the discussion to portray the platform in a bad light. It seems to be an extremely effective tactic, unfortunately for us.

    Reddit’s obfuscation of upvotes and downvotes is problematic, and makes it trivial for them to manipulate any discussion if they feel like it. Not to mention their ability to just nuke anything they don’t like with no repercussions.



  • It’s another type of content aggregator like Lemmy and Mbin. Totally unique software, not just an app.

    https://piefed.social/

    It’s not as well known because it only started development a little over a year ago, well after the APIcalypse when most of the Lemmy userbase came over from reddit. But it’s been improving rapidly and already has a lot of innovative features that Lemmy lacks. I believe that one of those features is better compatibility with Mastodon, but I’m not entirely sure. It’s also written in Python which makes it easy for a variety of developers to contribute if they so wish.




  • I’m not so sure they want to “persuade the leftists”, I think they probably just want to find other conservatives to validate their feelings. But there isn’t any space for that on Lemmy atm.

    They’ll probably need to make their own servers, which will immediately get defederated en masse. But I think Lemmy should be for every human being who seeks knowledge, even conservatives. That doesn’t mean we need to federate with them, but that’s the nature of open source software. You can’t pick and choose who uses it.




  • Wow. I never even noticed that option before. That’s actually pretty cool.

    But kind of sounds like a bug in that case, because if the admins wanted to remove the community then it shouldn’t be possible to view comments from there either.









  • Wow, TIL.

    I based that off fedidb but it seems to be very inaccurate. Obviously it wasn’t tracking until a certain point in Lemmy development.

    I’ll make a list of the major instances from before the APIcalpyse of June 2023 that are still active. For the Lemmy historians 🧐. I’m mostly basing this by the top admin account on each server, because the admins are listed in order of seniority in the sidebar.

    • lemmy.ml - Apr 2019
    • lemmygrad - Aug 2019
    • hexbear/chapo - July 2020
    • szmer.info - Aug 2020
    • lemmy.ca - Dec 2020
    • sopuli.xyz - Feb 2021
    • midwest.social - Aug 2021
    • mander.xyz - Dec 2021
    • beehaw.org - Jan 2022
    • slrpnk.net - April 2022
    • feddit.it - May 2022
    • lemmy.blahaj.zone - Jan 2023
    • infosec.pub - May 2023

    Honorable mention to feddit.de which was an early instance too IIRC and now lives on in feddit.org

    This is largely just an interesting piece of trivia, but also somewhat notable because servers generally don’t federate content from before they were founded. So the older servers will have local copies of posts and comments from the early days of Lemmy.

    For instance @[email protected] actually has 2.37k posts and 1.73k comments. But sh.itjust.works only caches about 850/800 posts/comments from that account, because we only joined the network in June 2023.