Spyke
lemmy.world

Why does lemmy.world, the largest instance, not simply eat the other instances?

76
lemmy.world

This this originate from Friends or did they reference some other movie thingy?

3
lemmy.world

So we end up with one instance having to serve millions of users... for free... Hmm yes that's going to work.

People on Lemmy are not going to like it but either Lemmy takes off and people will have to find ways to fund their instances or Lemmy dies.

We're in a nice period right now where kind people are able to run instances on donations or from their own pocket. But it's not going to last.

-1
lemmy.world

I don't think a Wikipedia-style donation system would be bad. It's better than ads.

8
Thurkeaureply
lemmy.world

I just hope they don't do what YouTube does and interrupt the most important and engaging parts of videos to show ads in the most jarring manner possible. ...though it would help if creators helped design their content for ads to have a place to go like how TV used to do.

1

I don't really see how this relates to my comment. The equivalent would be for Lemmy to insert a funding message in the middle of someone's post... What seems likely to me is a double wide post at the top of the page with a donation ask or a plan to give users who donate some extra flair or something.

Also, just use an ad blocker on YouTube or RevancedManager.

0
SpaceAapereply
lemmy.world

Let's have a mass organized bake sale. We'll call the lemon squares "Lemmy Squares". People will love it.

8
DVDreply
lemmy.world

I'm sure how the ecosystem of Lemmy will play out is that there are a handful, maybe 6 or 7, main instances that require funding and are simply massive with teams committed to them. Then you have the niche medium sized instances that are known for a particular community or two, such as an instance that is well known for its great vegetarian community or whatever. Then you'll have tiny instances that are used by irl friend groups, or for simply tech savvy people that want a home base instance that they can control.

We're already sort of set up like this, but less organized and smaller overall. Many instances have duplicates of the same communities right now which I think will slowly fade away as future updates make it easier to visit/search other instances.

5
lemmy.world

I'm expecting the location specific instances to split off though (shout out to my squad fams at aussie.zone) so that they don't get lost in the mix of the major general communities.

3

Oh, true. That kind of fits into the idea of mid-sized niche communities, but definitely locations will become a big thing.

2

Funny you ask, it's actually really cool how it just worked.

I used ShareX to take a screenshot of it, which was then saved to my clipboard (but you can use any screenshotting tool that saves to your clipboard, such as the built in Windows snip tool. I just love ShareX). Then I CTRL+ V'd it in the middle of the comment I was making and it just worked - auto uploaded with the proper syntax and everything. I was kind of shocked tbh.

11
Flederreply
lemmy.world

Strange, the spoiler doesn't work for me. I just see "::: spoiler" then the image.

12

oh shit, i just assumed it was there and my brain saw it until i read your comment lmao

5

99.5% uptime is very impressive for a community that is experiencing such explosive growth.

42
lemmy.world

I did read that @Ruud said in a post that Lemme.world can handle 1 million users as of right now.

He hopes that other instances get more traction so the crowds are distributed.

36
Antik 👾reply
lemmy.world

The point is that everyone CAN start an instance and become bigger. It's the users that decide.

37

I like this way of putting it. It’s like that post that was around a few days ago discussing lemmy as being “CEO-proof”.

It’s not really I guess, but if an instance got big and started being unfriendly/unreasonable to users they could just go to another instance and still be part of the federation.

13

If it gets too much they can just stop letting people join, can't they? I think for the beginning a little bit of centralizing will make stuff easier. For the long run it might be less desirable.

12

The upside is join-lemmy.org always puts the smaller but growing instances at the top to somewhat distribute the load for new users. Also there are new general purpose instances popping up, I quite like it and as long as there is no drama you can access most of the Fediverse from almost any instance.

8

Lol just saw someone complain about bots here and thought to myself that i would never seen one.

5
lemmy.world

I am happy to contribute! I think it's time for me to move on from Reddit. I am excited to help this platform grow and become something great - I just need to become less of a lurker.

33

Was a reddit lurker for years and became a massive contributor.

I am looking forward to continuing thag momentum. Heh.

6
lemmy.world

Unfortunately I don't have much faith in this social network until the bot issue is addressed. There is a huge contingent of spambots just waiting for their moments here.

27
FunkyClownreply
lemmy.world

Spam bots or spam servers? Everyone is saying regulate signups for servers but anyone can spin up a Lemmy server and spam with thousands of accounts until they are defedarated. Then 5 minutes later do it again with a new server. It’s not hard to setup a Lemmy server.

25

I actually think this is a non-issue , sure it will be a pain for a while but the decentralized model will easily adapt to this IMO. Its not like reddit was immune from bots eh.

An example is how obviously you can spot the bad actors here. I do not think is will be any more challenging indeed I think it will be easier to counter

16

“democracy” - meaning that new servers should have to apply to join

You mean a federation?

5
lemmy.world

Yeah, a nice feature of federation is that real communities can adjust their sign-up processes to minimize bot sign-ups, and while determined botfarms can spin up their own servers, that leads to pretty much the least controversial use case for admins to block another server.

Mastodon's run into similar issues in the past with both bots and scrapers and typically no one has any issue with admins there defederating and entirely blocking those servers.

5

Yeah, malicious instances can always be defederated and cleaned from the caches.

2

Which is why it's great that the bottom of every single page, on every single lemmy instance, there's a button to take you to the modlog. It shows what servers have been defederated and when. So if the person running your instance is being too heavy-handed with it, you can take your account and move to a different instance.

So, it's still a bit of a non-issue.

1
lemmy.world

That's because I brought snacks, who doesn't like the most finger friendly food?

27
lemmy.world

Everytime I see you post a comment it is a painful reminder that Bugles are no longer sold in my country.

5

came from reddit. lemmy principles seem to align with me open for everyone and communities run their own instance if required

18
kbin.social

Over in kbin.social.. wondering if there will be a simple way to consolidate duplicate magazines/communities

17
phazed09reply
kbin.social

It'd be interesting to have metamagazines or something along the like. There's a lot of repeat mags out there that would benefit from an easy way to share/federate at a smaller scale than per-instance.

10

I'd like something in this vein to view multiple communities of the same topic at once (like folders/multi-reddits/etc.) too.

Another idea, if possible, might be to have Lemmy search for existing communities/magazines in linked instances as you're trying to make a community, similar to how it searches for already posted links, so that folks are given a heads up to those existing communities. If they want to go on to make their own local version then it's just up to them.

12
lemmy.world

Nice, what is this k6qw instance about, though? So many users and just 1 community without any posts?

14
Overzeetopreply
lemmy.world

It does seem a little out of balance. We should ask @[email protected] how/why they're personally reviewed 38,000 email-less sign up statements in under 7 days and who they think is populating his server (according to one of his posts from a week ago).

(not sure my tag syntax was correct.... maybe @[email protected] autolinking works?)

13

I mean, this just stinks of bots. This made it real easy to at least spot them. All those signups and not a single post? I agree with the notion of contacting the instance admin. They may be completely unaware that a swarm of bots signed up on the instance.

5

I ended up there/here thanks to a "guide for redditors" that suggested it as a good instance to start with. That particular guide was at the top of the Google results when researching lemmy.

2

I don't think we have that many. The instances that were victims of bot attacks grew by more than 10k in less than a day. This instance's growth has been steady at 1k~2k per day with the captcha enabled.

39

The admins are actively watching for them, and quickly responded when signups went significantly unusual, so it seems likely that bots are not a significant percentage of signups

5

The captcha seems to be protecting the bigger, older instances, it's all new instances that you've never heard of that randomly have 10k+ bot accounts.

https://the-federation.info/platform/73#drawer-opened

If you scroll to the list of servers and sort by total users, you can see dozens of ghost servers with thousands of accounts and like 10 active users. Alternatively, leave it on the default sorting to see all of the servers that actually have activity.

Should be pretty easy to defederate those instances if the bots start causing problems.

8
lemmy.world

I've seen more bigger communities on here than the ml instance

12
lemmy.world

For some reason, when I tried to sign up for another instance, it wouldn't send the confirmation emal or load when I tried to send it. I guess this is the only working instance that is easy to get to.

11
joshinyareply
lemmy.world

For me, it's because the password I entered didn't meet the minimum requirements. The instance signup page had some kind of issue with actually letting me know that was the problem, it just gave me the spinning pinwheel forever. I refreshed and tried changing the password to something more complex and it worked instantly

7
Thurkeaureply
lemmy.world

For some reason, I was able to bring the same name,, password, and everything here and it worked. That other server did want a rather complex password and both said the password was "medium" strength. The first one I tried did return me to the landing page as if it took, and said "email sent" without an email actually arriving. I'm guessing that it was just buggy.

4

I think a lot of instances have been having issues in general, it's just that one of the more common issues seems to be an infinite load screen instead of telling you there was an error, regardless of whether the error was "bad password" or "something went wrong on the server."

1

Nice numbers there. I just wanted an instance with IPv6 already enabled and randomly landed on lemmy.world. No regrets :)

11
lemmy.world

Please someone tell me how to delete accounts off of memmy app it drives me nuts seeing both because it loads the one I don’t want to load.

11
lemmy.world

Add that as a feature request on his GitHub. If you don’t know how to I’ll do it for you

9

Alternatively the discord server just got a feedback channel, you can suggest it there

5

WE NEED OUR INSTANCE ALSO WHY ARE YOU SCREAMING IT MAKES ME *scared.exe*

6
lemmy.world

As far as I can tell from here, kbin.social has about as much people on it.

11
Flederreply
lemmy.world

Can I join kbin.social with Lemmy clients or do I need a separate app?

5
Antik 👾reply
lemmy.world

Might have to test that one out yourself. Ofcourse you can subscribe to kbin.social communities from your lemmy.world instance but if you can actually add them that's another question. Let me know :P

4
PaxSapienreply
lemmy.world

I got bombarded by ads for this recently: is that the Jack in the Box clown? Or just a generic one?

2

It's a generic clown. The Little Engine That Could is a classic children's novel.

2

The rapid Lemmy growth as a whole is certainly bot driven but lemmy.world addressed the bot issue already so the majority of new accounts are most likely organic.

19
lemmy.world

There's an awful amount of engagement for it to all be bots. Unless I too am a bot?

9

I see why you would think that but server admin @ruud was quick to notice and actually closed signup for a short period while this was happening. And then after captcha was enabled the influx of bot users was halted.

8