LOL I should have reread that one.
LOL I should have reread that one.
The data is not centralized, but everyone is using the same aggravation aggregation service (indexer) to access the data.
No. All of your direct interactions are with your instance which federates with others.
I’m not a fan of Kagi’s founder, so I generally don’t use it.
You don’t seem to understand the retail operations of Amazon. They provide logistics and marketing services to retailers, they also directly compete against those retailers because those retailers can’t do better at logistics and marketing without using Amazon’s services.
When I want to have back and forth between people on a regular basis, I choose chat apps. Mastodon feels like it’s trying to be a poorly designed chat app.
How does that site count active accounts?
Discord and Reddit also had uniquely improved their UIs over the existing options.
The peering agreements are based on network traffic of the customers. Passing through costs to customers is always a thing.
Peering agreements have been around for a long time on the internet, they’re part the backbone of the internet.
Peering agreements for internet traffic, what a stupid concept.
They’re purposely disruptive to the community, they are not part of the community.
Lemmy.world has no lock in on their “power”. They have the most volunteer labor, money, and infrastructure. That’s makes them stable, so people aren’t worried about their data suddenly going offline (like kbin) and they don’t worry about the service being flaky.
Scaled is intentionally promoting communities with fewer subscribers. It’s intentionally demoting the most active posts bt demoting any posts from the communities with more subscribers.
What’s the 5 year running total for Meta settlements of this sort?
Credit Reporting business started before the internet existed, so probably not.
TrueWork exists, but they have a shitty privacy policy.
Thanks, I hate it.
When did that get added? That’s great!
Thanks for pointing that out.
But the buttons being too close is still annoying. That’s only one example of buttons being too close too. A moderator can ban someone from a community and accidentally appoint that someone as a moderator. And confirmation messages for uncommon actions is just good UX too.
I think there’s also a weird and inconsistent mix of buttons shown by default and hidden under a dropdown menu. There are many added clicks to do a lot of things for no gain.
Mastodon is not currently on the list