That whole exchange cracked me up as they were throwing out strawman arguments to hype their own project, like instances are too expensive. When we pointed out that was untrue and gave them data they ended up asking for fundraising tips.
The beautiful thing about the Fediverse is that it isn’t a competition.
What’s the context here?
Edit: am smooth brained idiot - context is on the post description
Discussion on how centralized was better
Just seen the context in the post description, hadn’t spotted that at first.
I wasn’t sure you had seen it, I assumed you didn’t want to go to Reddit ha ha
Yes, the 180 they made was quite something ha ha
“Lemmy is the least successful Reddit alternative except from all others which have been tried” – Abraham Lincoln
I’m not aware how fediverse works, can someone explain why when I look at the same post through lemm.ee instance and through hexbear instance they have different amount of comments? There are some overlapping comments, but those ones have different amount of likes and dislikes. I’m a bit confused
Hexbear has been defederated by a number of instances and this will cause such a disparity.
I see, thanks
Hexbear lmao
@ma1w4re It’s because it works similar to email. When someone posts, it sends out copies of the message to all of the followers. But some don’t arrive, or some people have blocks in place, or something is not configured right. As a result, not all servers get the complete conversation.
But some people are working to fix that so that all of the servers that support threaded conversations can download the complete conversation.
I see, interesting. Thank you
Some servers choose not to connect with each other.
Those servers have users and since they choose not to connect, there will be disparity.
Let’s say I’m on server ‘a’ and you are on server ‘b’ and this post is on server ‘c’
In this example, we can say that a and b connect with c, but a and b don’t connect with each other.
We would both independently see the post on server c, and we could both leave a comment. But since a and b don’t connect, we wouldn’t be able to see each other’s comments. The people on server c would be able to see both of our comments though.
This connection is called federation and it allows individual servers to control who they interact with.
Lemmy is just a piece of software, the people running the software on their servers control who they connect with. you could for example have multiple federations that comprise tons of servers that have no direct connection at all, resulting in two totally different networks.
I see, thanks
Different defeserated instances, problems with content being federated due to network latency. There are a bunch of possible reasons.
Can you give an example of such post?
Recent post about Linus on Linux@lemmy.ml, if I typed the instance right
cohost is kill :(