this post was submitted on 04 Dec 2023
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I know of one account, but mainly because I initiated the claim process lol
I'd prefer a slower rollout while things get implemented because yea, it's a bit of a mess in the meantime. It has potential, and I'd hate for it to fall apart because some aspect of it spirals
Why would you send someone to a server "stealing" identities and offer the "victim" to "claim" it? Wouldn't it be more ethical to send them to i.e. join-lemmy.org/instances with the freedom to chose what instance and community they'd want to be part of?
No identity is being "stolen". The mirrors are not doing anything on behalf of the users, and no content is being altered.
Go to /r/redditalternatives and let me know how many people simply don't understand the concept of instances.
Or understand the concept of instances, but didn't want to bother with the process of finding out which one to choose.
Or went with the "just go to lemmy.world" approach, got burned because it was struggling to deal with the influx of people and thought "Aw, Lemmy sucks".
Or took the time to find an instance, but after signing up had no idea how to find (re-)discover all their niche communities.
Fediverser is solving most if not all these problems.
I don't see the point replying to you any more, you seemingly overlook the points I'm trying to make in a sort of "the goal justifies the means" argumentation. But others might find it interesting.
It's copying content belonging to a different entity without permission and presents them on a third party site without enough clarification to be distinguishable from the original account (many have expressed confusion at replying to "mirrored"/ghost accounts). It's not a content viewer like teddit etc. It's copying the content and presenting it for itself.
I hope people understand how it can be argued for it being a stolen identity, even if one personally doesn't agree with it.
Sure these are issues, but I still don't think it's ethical to present "claim your account now!" to users. It comes across as borderline extortionate to me. I don't think it's ethical to apply "peer pressure" by having regular users clamor for people to claim their accounts.
How many times have I personally explained to you that it was the ddos not the influx of people. Every time you find some way to bash on LW and then you come ask for favors?
I'm sorry if I'm misrepresenting the reasons, but in practice what happened is that the largest instance was constantly offline and unresponsive.
Be transparent. You claimed that the instance needed to be defederated based on the mirror bots. Now the bots are gone and real users are coming (like I said they would) and suddenly this is you "making a favor"?
Didn't you ask us to make an exception for your bots when we defederated with alien.top almost two months ago? Special treatment AKA a favor, yes.
Anyway you are always arguing in bad faith, just like when you were trying to spread the message that Lemmy World is too big and bad for the fediverse. It wasn't for the fediverse, it was to push people to your (failing) hosting company. And you are still pushing that same narrative and play dumb when confronted.
Be transparent he says.
No, my exact question was "how many real users will it take for you to stop considering it a bot-instance only".
My argument has always been that having one single instance controlling the majority of users is bad for decentralization. The fact that one of the LW mods can be so petty to the point of holding a block against another instance (when the alledged reasons for the block are no longer valid) is kinda proving my point.
You didn't see me criticizing lemm.ee, or beehaw, or programming.dev, or sdf.org, or feddit.*. None of them were working to monopolize the reddit migrants like LW. But sure, I am the one with ulterior motives.