this post was submitted on 14 Aug 2023
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Mildly Infuriating

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Home to all things "Mildly Infuriating" Not infuriating, not enraging. Mildly Infuriating. All posts should reflect that.

I want my day mildly ruined, not completely ruined. Please remember to refrain from reposting old content. If you post a post from reddit it is good practice to include a link and credit the OP. I'm not about stealing content!

It's just good to get something in this website for casual viewing whilst refreshing original content is added overtime.


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cross-posted from: https://sh.itjust.works/post/2881638

The largest piracy community is hosted over at !piracy@lemmy.dbzer0.com

lemmy.world has blocked it. It appears to have also blocked !piracy@lemmy.ml.

If this is a problem for you, I'd suggest migrating accounts using LASIM to an instance that doesn't block it (such as lemm.ee).

edit:

An official announcement has been made:

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[–] Kevnyon@lemmy.world 4 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (8 children)

Anyone who thought that a decentralized option (Lemmy or anything else) would ever have a serious chance at replacing a centralized option (such as Reddit) was always huffing ungodly amounts of copium. Stuff like this where the admins work for free and have very specific hard-ons for what they think they should allow is one of the many reasons it was never going to work.

And I say this as someone who has seriously tried using kbin/Lemmy for the past 2.5 months. I have found plenty of good stuff here, but I think I would have stopped already if LJ didn't release sync, which has so far been the only thing that has made Lemmy bearable to use.

[–] Pi7on@lemmy.world -2 points 1 year ago (4 children)

100% agree.

Serious question: what's been stopping us from making a fully decentralized reddit, or social network in general?

Something that's completely peer to peer based, where people themselves host the content they interact with, and have the freedom to hide whichever type of content THEY want?

Has it been purely a technical problem? Is there discourse on this concept?

[–] seiryth@lemmy.world 11 points 1 year ago (1 children)

It's a technical set of problems.

  • Where does the front end live, who hosts it, who pays for the compute, and what determines the latest version is the truest version
  • where does the data sit. Posts, media, content, and how does this get referenced properly in a safe way.

What's funny is truely distributed compute is totally possible today, thanks to a lot of work done in the blockchain community. Notice I said blockchain and not crypto, we don't want the bullshit associated with that (coins, nfts etc). What we want is distributed compute and storage that can be read in a way that provides the same function as Reddit etc. Coupled with a good client experience like sync.

The biggest problem with that though is that blockchain that is truely distributed is slow by nature, because each block of data is distributed and validated to all nodes that host to keep consistency. And the larger a site becomes, the more data there is to store, and the more resource intensive verification becomes so therefore the nodes slowly gain a higher set of requirements.

So the middle ground is something like Lemmy. Where you can run your own instance, that talks to a wider federated network of instances where no one single entity can control the content.

In tech, a lot of the above is explained by a concept called CAP theorem. It's a really interesting problem that has only really been solved by a few vendors (google spanner is a good one) but even then it doesn't cover the distributed part.

[–] Pi7on@lemmy.world 4 points 1 year ago

Interesting, thanks for the insight.

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