Lemmy was a great idea. It put reddit into the users hands. Its fast, works well and gave the community control of its community
I’m not endorsing Seedit, but I support decentralized social media and want to share information for those who are interested. This is not promotion, im ust spreading awareness.
I know a lot of people here hate Reddit (rightfully so) because of how they keep banning people for their opinions. If you miss the old Reddit experience but want something that actually decentralized and can’t be taken down, check out Seedit.
• Looks & feels like old Reddit
• Fully P2P on IPFS → No global admin to ban you
• You can self-host your own community
• ENS domains used for subplebbits
• MVP is coming in 2 weeks, and speed will improve
Right now, it’s a bit slow, but once the MVP drops, it’ll be fast. If anyone is seriously interested in running a community, you can dm me I’ll buy an ENS for you.
Seedit doesn’t rely on any servers. It’s pure P2P, running entirely on IPFS. No central authority, it literally can’t be taken down.
Seedit is NOT a Lemmy competitor. It’s part of the Plebbit protocol, which supports multiple UIs. In fact, a Lemmy-style UI is coming soon.
The code is fully open source, If you’re into decentralization and open protocols, check it out.
Decentralization is cool but unmoderated spaces tend to attract the worst kinds of people.
As someone who got banned by a moderator for saying trans men should not be allowed to compete against women in the same sport, I disagree.
Some moderators are just nuts and use their power to control conversations so it fits their personal preference.
I prefer platforms where users are in control, not moderators. It requires a certain amount of work as a user so its not for everyone of course.
theres a reason you got banned from reddit, stop being transphobic.
Trans men don’t compete against women. They compete against men. Trans women on the other hand… you’re talking about something you literally won’t even take time to understand. Unsurprising your opinion is unwanted in moderated spaces.
case in point.
Exactly.