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Fighting against anti-lemmy misinformation on reddit

old.reddit.com Misinformation about lemmy flooding the community (possibly reddit trying to prevent people from leaving)

I think there's a team of people intentionally spreading lemmy misinformation. I think reddit is trying to get people not to switch from this...

Misinformation about lemmy flooding the community (possibly reddit trying to prevent people from leaving)

Please check my post, I think everything I said is very valid, but I want this community to see it too, and help steer the discussion, I think reddit is doing this intentionally.

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  • I don't want to visit that place anymore - could you please copy and paste the post here?

    • The point of this post is actually to get people to participate over there to stop the spread of misinformation, i'd appreciate it if you went over there with an adblocker, but if you insist:

      I think there's a team of people intentionally spreading lemmy misinformation. I think reddit is trying to get people not to switch from this platform

      People are saying the same things everywhere, but on any analysis, they don't actually make sense, let me give an example:

      Lemmy is absolutely too convoluted for normal people. "There are multiple servers, many of which overlap with each other content-wise? Which one am I supposed to use? This isn't as simple as reddit," says the photographer who posted to /r/earthporn, says the politics junkie who posted in /r/worldnews, says the creative writer who posted to /r/nosleep.

      There is no way to prevent this from happening again. It will happen again, no matter what. If Lemmy gets big, it will only do so if a couple servers rise above all others so the normies can understand that those are the servers to join... and those servers eventually will take advantage of their users just as reddit has done."

      There's no aspect of truth to this comment, as an example, let's try actually doing what they're saying is too hard:

      https://beehaw.org

      click "communities"

      search "news"

      oh, there's the one at the top with the most subscribers

      https://beehaw.org/c/news

      Done

      So, did they just make up that it was too convoluted for normal people? Yes. Is there some truth to the notion that there are multiple communities for the same thing... Also yes, but there are on reddit too, it's no different than r/art and r/art1 r/art2 and the billion other subreddits in a similar position. People just search and then use the largest one... so is it an actual problem, or is it just grasping at straws? You be the judge of that.

      Are there things that make lemmy difficult? Yes, but they're rapidly being solved and extremely minimal, other than that issue tracker, the other thing that might stop you is that some lemmy instances require a message and approve signup, this is because they widely aren't monetized and are run by volunteers with no intention of ever monetizing. Neither of these things are real blockers to normal human adoption, and neither of them are long-term fundamental issues.

      If you think federation is too complex for normal users, I ask you, why does email face no such difficulty? Why is nobody complaining about how difficult email is because of federation?

      The other issue is genuinely a problem, the lemmy developers are tankies... however, lemmy is released under an open source license, none of their ideology is being injected into the code, and this is akin to worrying about the ideology of the developers of email. Use an instance not created by them, and you're safe from this entirely, I recommend https://beehaw.org/

      Don't let the misinformation factory stress you, I don't have proof that reddit is doing this on purpose, but this seems to be a common set of lies... and if you don't like lemmy anyway, there's also kbin, which federates with lemmy but is made by completely separate developers.

      Federation is NECESSARY for a non-corpo/government propaganda AND control ridden future. If reddit were federated, nobody would give a fuck about this api thing, because we'd just go to another instance, and all of our content would still be available on that other instance. That's why reddit fears federation, none of the issues with lemmy are fundamental, let's build a better future, one where we don't have to hope a benevolent centralized monopoly/dictatorship on a community will work for us!

      And lemmy is the only way to save these precious reddit apps: https://github.com/derivator/tafkars/tree/main/tafkars-lemmy

      • undefined> i’d appreciate it if you went over there

        Please don't. At least not until the 15th if you must. Personally I'll continue to avoid it.

      • Gosh, I felt like I was going to make this post, albeit not from a username titled "communist" 😅 .

        Now, I always implore anyone who'll lend an ear - please, hold your horses on labeling devs as "tankies". Let's not instantly stamp them good or bad. Rather, let's mull over the behavior of a community that decides its course of action based on whether it's supposedly tainted by a particular ideology. Try to think of the bigger picture of how people act as a whole based on information and what those actions benefit.

        Let's level with each other here. The GPL? It's got more than a dash of Marx, if you ask my humble self (and heck, I think that's a good thing). But has that deterred folks from assembling magnificent creations under the banner of a collective project? So, where do we end up if we tread down this logical path? Do we forsake Open Source software, just because its bedrock principles share a striking resemblance with Socialism/Communism? Is this selective ideological litmus test the norm now? And what fuels this selective disposition?

        Now, just imagine, if I were a bigwig at a deep-pocketed corporation, wouldn't it be a walk in the park to sow the conspiracy that ALL Lemmy devs are rabid tankies (ALL of them, seriously? If I pitch in, does that make me a hardened communist?). Couple this with the palpable fear that Reddit might just bulldoze their way to victory, and voila, you've got a fearful, active amygdala ready to perceive an "enemy" - no matter how illogical. Outrage, my dear friends, is among the most contagious of emotions. Curiously enough, this entire conspiracy/misinformation hinges on just that - unbridled outrage.

        It's almost as if there's no call for outrage, provided one possesses even a smidgen of understanding about open source development, its inherent messiness, and the swirling ideologies around it. Now, those are the nuggets worth pondering. But, who am I to say, right?

        • The problem with tankies has nothing to do with communism, i'm a communist, that's not the problem at all.

          The problem with tankies is that they're authoritarian genocide deniers. The GPL doesn't have any authoritarianism or genocide denial in it.

          The LEAD DEV denies the genocide Uyghurs in china. It's much worse than you're assuming.

          • Yeah! Definitely, I understand that! But in my neck of the woods "tankies" are more just boogeymen that people throw around when they want to cast an entire group as immoral. It's not that they don't exist, but they aren't gaining power either. It just seems like an appeal to fear (a reasonable one at that), but using illogical framing that doesn't at all represent reality. That's the fundemental crux of it for me. It may come to bite me in the future too! Growing up in conservative parts in the U.S. I've grown numb to people claiming others are communists - it comes across as more a technique for division than any real concern of community harm.

            I'm not trying be an apologist for the devs opinions or detract from them as much as I'm trying to state that open source, and this project - given its git history - doesn't appear to spread authoritarianism. I didn't sign an agreement to violently seize the means of production upon cloning the repository. Had this information not been swirling around on reddit (and now lemmy) I would've never known that I had to "cancel" yet another thing.

            I mean, personally, I'd rather fork it and make it into a vision that the people of Tucson want in their social media experience. Lemmy is a bit better architected, and I think the codebase is a bit more mature for such thing.

          • genocide Uyghurs in china

            As a person who hasn't really looked up the issue(I mean I have read about it on the net here n there, but have never dived into the issue deeply), I have seen people talking about it on both sides and I'm confused.
            The main things I'm hearing from people who say that a genocide isn't happening are:

            • That it's their suppression of religion expressions being public and that people are not being genocided, but public religious expression is not greatly provided by China. That it's similar to the stereotypes created against muslims after events like the World trade centre attack and it's being exaggerated as genocide.
            • That it's just propaganda seen on English speaking forums to deface the other side and if an actual genocide was happening, the countries in Asia itself would be taking action and talking about it and currently only western countries who're far away are talking about it the most. One side claims that it's Western or Capitalist propagnada aimed to defame and the opposite side says that it's Chinese or Communist propaganda aimed to whitewash.

            Most of the times I've seen it, both sides accuse each other of being blinded by propaganda and the convo devolves there.

            Which side is actually right here?

      • To challenge some of your replies, if those are welcome.

        People do actually complain about email, quite often. Spam filters and deliverability are real challenges sometimes. Email also has a lot of gotchas that you can run into - like what happens when you lose control of a domain name? What happens if your email provider shuts down? Who actually owns the email - you or the provider? A lot of email protocol has inherent security and privacy issues too. I don't know if I'd use email as the leading example. Phone networks or text messages might be a little more straightforward.

        I also don't think it's entirely true that federation is strictly necessary. Wikimedia seems to run a lot of centralized services with large scale and large community with no federation. Tildes is a valid alternative to both Lemmy instances and Reddit with no federation. If Tildes for example went in a bad direction or became corrupted - it is open source. You could just start a new Tildes using the same source code. It isn't federated, but does it have to be?

        • People do actually complain about email, quite often. Spam filters and deliverability are real challenges sometimes. Email also has a lot of gotchas that you can run into - like what happens when you lose control of a domain name? What happens if your email provider shuts down? Who actually owns the email - you or the provider? A lot of email protocol has inherent security and privacy issues too. I don’t know if I’d use email as the leading example. Phone networks or text messages might be a little more straightforward.

          Very few of these things are something that normal everyday email users have to deal with with any regularity, I work in IT and while the windows outlook client does have a lot of issues, no such problems exist if you use gmail, or any of the common email providers, really.

          I also don’t think it’s entirely true that federation is strictly necessary. Wikimedia seems to run a lot of centralized services with large scale and large community with no federation. Tildes is a valid alternative to both Lemmy instances and Reddit with no federation. If Tildes for example went in a bad direction or became corrupted - it is open source. You could just start a new Tildes using the same source code. It isn’t federated, but does it have to be?

          Yes, it absolutely does have to be, because federation means that the community isn't tied to any particular instance. Wikipedia is great right now, but what if somebody else takes over wikipedia, then we're simply screwed, they have complete control over the platform, we can't just stop using wikipedia and get the same content elsewhere, because that's simply not possible without federation. Especially on profit-driven websites, this is an impossible issue to solve without federation.

          . If Tildes for example went in a bad direction or became corrupted - it is open source. You could just start a new Tildes using the same source code. It isn’t federated, but does it have to be?

          Yes, we could start a new tildes... but without ANY OF THE CONTENT, nobody would switch unless there was a massive reason to, it would take a massive feat of community organization to switch.

          Whereas on a federated system, if you switched to another instance, you'd lose literally nothing.

          • Very few of these things are something that normal everyday email users have to deal with with any regularity, I work in IT and while the windows outlook client does have a lot of issues, no such problems exist if you use gmail, or any of the common email providers, really.

            These problems do exist for normal people. If you violate Google terms of service across any Google service for example you will lose access to your @gmail.com account with no recourse. Email services that aren't run by a megacorp shutdown all the time. In this list of Gmail alternatives posted on Mashable from 2007 over 50% are no longer in business.

            With email most people have three options:

            1. Self hosting

            This requires more technical knowledge than the average person has and comes with risks and deliverability issues.

            1. Use a smaller independent company

            You could use service like ProtonMail or Fastmail - but these companies are far more likely to go out of business compared to something like Apple or Google.

            1. Use a megacorporation

            This comes with privacy and control concerns. If you aren't paying for Gmail - you are being monetized in some other way.

            Yes, we could start a new tildes… but without ANY OF THE CONTENT, nobody would switch unless there was a massive reason to, it would take a massive feat of community organization to switch.

            From a privacy perspective this sounds like a feature to me, not a bug. I don't necessarily want my content to live in perpetuity. I regularly delete my Reddit comments and posts after a few weeks. I delete my all my social media accounts entirely every two years. Tildes going down and being replaced with a new instance and fresh content is not a problem for me.

            Different values I guess.

            • These problems do exist for normal people. If you violate Google terms of service across any Google service for example you will lose access to your @gmail.com account with no recourse. Email services that aren’t run by a megacorp shutdown all the time. In this list of Gmail alternatives posted on Mashable from 2007 over 50% are no longer in business.

              Yet nearly everyone has an email, and nobody is suggesting we centralize it, because that would be a significantly worse experience for everyone. All of the issues you complain about would also exist in a centralized instance, especially the "use a megacorporation" one, are you suggesting reddit isn't a megacorporation? If megacorps still work as options on federated instances, then that still means federation is a net positive, EVEN IF they're the only ones that can make it work reliably, it's still better that they're all stuck competing. You'll notice, gmail doesn't suck.

              From a privacy perspective this sounds like a feature to me, not a bug. I don’t necessarily want my content to live in perpetuity. I regularly delete my Reddit comments and posts after a few weeks. I delete my all my social media accounts entirely every two years. Tildes going down and being replaced with a new instance and fresh content is not a problem for me.

              Why on earth do you expect your data to be private on a public forum?

              Do you not know about archive.org?

              Even on reddit, they EXIST to sell your data, privacy is completely nonexistent on public forums, and it never will be, you're essentially asking users to trust in a benevolent dictatorship on their data.

              If that's something you truly care about, you should be self-hosting, not pretending that what you're doing is somehow secure because you delete your data, do you honestly think reddit deletes your data? How do you know tildes does? You have no idea, because you couldn't control it even if you wanted to.

              • Yet nearly everyone has an email, and nobody is suggesting we centralize it, because that would be a significantly worse experience for everyone. All of the issues you complain about would also exist in a centralized instance, especially the “use a megacorporation” one, are you suggesting reddit isn’t a megacorporation?

                People are actively migrating to centralized communication platforms away from email. Pretty much every messaging application or chat service with mass adoption at the moment is centralized.

                I am not suggesting anything, just saying that I don't know if email is a great example of federation without issues. I think it's important to be transparent about the downsides of federation as part of the discussion.

                Why on earth do you expect your data to be private on a public forum?

                Do you not know about archive.org?

                There is a difference between expecting something to be private on the internet, and the application you are using respecting your privacy. Archive.org is not run by Lemmy - it is a third party outside of our ability to control. Lemmy can control how it handles deleted and edited content within it's system. I don't like how Lemmy handles deleted content for example. I think a delete should be a delete - it should be gone, or anonymized within Lemmy specifically.

                Even on reddit, they EXIST to sell your data, privacy is completely nonexistent on public forums, and it never will be, you’re essentially asking users to trust in a benevolent dictatorship on their data.

                I have not made that argument. There is also nothing, as far as I can see, that would prevent the owner of a Lemmy instance (or a fork of the Lemmy software) from doing anything you list here. The software license allows for commercial use and doesn't seem to include any mandates for how instance maintainers interact with user data.

                • You're forgetting that you're comparing to reddit.

                  >People are actively migrating to centralized communication platforms away from email. Pretty much every messaging application or chat service with mass adoption at the moment is centralized.

                  Matrix is catching on and growing rapidly for a reason. Also, email is still widely used in offices for a reason, have you ever had a job that didn't send you emails? I haven't. Have you ever had a job that didn't utilize emails heavily? I haven't.

                  Centralized messaging is used for instant messaging, which is a different usecase than email. I'm sure matrix will overtake the corporate world just like email did, because of the strengths of federation, a company can have an internal messaging client and not have to worry about leaks, and trusting microsoft/whatever company to run their shit well.

                  >I have not made that argument. There is also nothing, as far as I can see, that would prevent the owner of a Lemmy instance (or a fork of the Lemmy software) from doing anything you list here. The software license allows for commercial use and doesn’t seem to include any mandates for how instance maintainers interact with user data.

                  You're right, reddit does the same thing, though. You can host your own lemmy instance, and then you'll be in control of the data. On any other platform, you have no choice beyond trusting the benevolent dictatorship.

                  If anything that's a reason to fight for federation, not a reason to fight against it.

                  • Matrix is catching on and growing rapidly for a reason. Also, email is still widely used in offices for a reason, have you ever had a job that didn’t send you emails? I haven’t. Have you ever had a job that didn’t utilize emails heavily? I haven’t.

                    Centralized messaging is used for instant messaging, which is a different usecase than email. I’m sure matrix will overtake the corporate world just like email did, because of the strengths of federation, a company can have an internal messaging client and not have to worry about leaks, and trusting microsoft/whatever company to run their shit well.

                    Every company I've worked with in the past five years is communicating primarily through Microsoft Teams, Zoom, or Slack. Email is typically reserved for meeting invites or communication outside of the company. I run a team of software engineers and we probably use email less than once a month outside of accepting or declining meeting invites. I do hope Matrix catches on and continues to grow.

                    To follow along with this argument though, if companies wanted federation - wouldn't they run their own email servers internally instead of outsourcing that out to Microsoft or Google? I don't think I've worked with a company in the last decade that ran it's own mail servers.

                    You’re right, reddit does the same thing, though. You can host your own lemmy instance, and then you’ll be in control of the data. On any other platform, you have no choice beyond trusting the benevolent dictatorship.

                    If anything that’s a reason to fight for federation, not a reason to fight against it.

                    Do you actually control your data if you host your own Lemmy instance? What's stopping another Lemmy instances from caching, storing, or using the data for it's own purposes?

                    Again, I'm not against federation, I'm literally on Lemmy right now. I'm on Mastodon too. I think federation has benefits. It's important to be honest and transparent about the pros and cons.

                    • To follow along with this argument though, if companies wanted federation - wouldn’t they run their own email servers internally instead of outsourcing that out to Microsoft or Google? I don’t think I’ve worked with a company in the last decade that ran it’s own mail servers.

                      I literally have never worked with a company that didn't use their own email server, I don't know what you're talking about.

                      Do you actually control your data if you host your own Lemmy instance? What’s stopping another Lemmy instances from caching, storing, or using the data for it’s own purposes?

                      Nothing, but you not caring about that contradicts your argument of not caring about archive.org, that'd still be an external server downloading your data, it's no different.

                      Again, I’m not against federation, I’m literally on Lemmy right now. I’m on Mastodon too. I think federation has benefits. It’s important to be honest and transparent about the pros and cons.

                      I don't think there are any cons EXCEPT that developing a federated option is more complicated, but there are no cons for end-users, all of the cons you listed have much bigger equivalents problems for centralized services.

                      • I literally have never worked with a company that didn’t use their own email server, I don’t know what you’re talking about.

                        You've never worked with a company using Google Workspace or Office 365/Exchange Online?

                        Nothing, but you not caring about that contradicts your argument of not caring about archive.org, that’d still be an external server downloading your data, it’s no different.

                        How Lemmy instances interact is a function of the Lemmy software and federation. Archive.org is not federated with a Lemmy instance. It's literally scraping content and saving a local copy of it. This isn't preventable without requiring a login to view any content.

                        I don’t think there are any cons EXCEPT that developing a federated option is more complicated, but there are no cons for end-users, all of the cons you listed have much bigger equivalents problems for centralized services.

                        I just can't agree with this. My parents are going to understand how to use Twitter and how Twitter works much faster than they'd be able to figure out how Mastodon works. They'd also be able to figure out how Tildes or Reddit works faster than Lemmy.

                        https://join-lemmy.org/ for example has a distinctly technical first aesthetic. The first page talks about "selfhosted" and has a screenshot of a code example and the technology it is built with. The page appears geared towards software engineers. When you navigate to the join a server page it's got a broken page for sopuli.xyz, it lists random user counts, etc...

                        This isn't impossible for a non-technical user to understand, but it does have a higher hurdle for understanding compared to traditional centralized services.

                        The federation concepts are first and foremost in the presentation, instead of the user experience.

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