Judging by this you’d love the Fediverse Twitter alternatives, of which I use much more than Lemmy (Feddit). Here’s a list of instances, works similarly to this, except it’s Fediverse Twitter rather than Reddit.
Judging by this you’d love the Fediverse Twitter alternatives, of which I use much more than Lemmy (Feddit). Here’s a list of instances, works similarly to this, except it’s Fediverse Twitter rather than Reddit.
The Fediverse is home to more open-minded individuals, so that sounds about right. All of us here just like chit-chatting about whatever we nerd over. ;)
Well, that’s where the decentralization comes in. There’s NSFW instances out there, just gotta find em.
My primary computer: (NOT LINUX) Windows 10, I know, shocking. Laptop for programming: It’s an old HP Pavilion from 2015. Linux Mint with i3. ThinkPad for fun stuff: Artix Linux. Big ass Cisco servers in my room: openBSD emulation.
Best to look at federated instances as more official, set-in-stone subreddits. They all (usually) have rules and most of the time the instance is not responsible for a single person doing actions like that. If a kick or ban is also swiftly given, that usually also voids the instance owners of any illegal content.
Any community is a valid community, if there’s 20 upvotes that’s still 20 people who saw, enjoyed, and gave it some time, and that matters on the modern internet where there’s a bit more gatekeeping than usual!
Would be willing to answer any questions about the Fediverse that people viewing this post may have, by the way. Don’t be shy :)
As another commenter mentioned, you’ll notice more meaningful conversation can be gained on the Fediverse than on other social media platforms. Everyone here is usually willing to spend some time talking to ya if it catches their attention. Also, not many people delve into politics where it isn’t relevant. Just something I’ve noticed. People like staying on topic more and it’s great.
I can most agree with the deeper and more meaningful interactions. Fediverse feels more interpersonal with others for sure, I’ve had huge threads in public Fedi networks where we get 20 people on a thread, just having some friendly conversation that you otherwise would not see on Reddit or Twitter.
I do highly recommend Mastodon! It is a great Twitter alternative, and is way more laid back at least in my experience. I use it as my frontend to the Fediverse on my phone as it is easier that way, but I prefer Pleroma and Soapbox otherwise. Still need a Lemmy frontend on my phone but, eh, not a phone user that much anyways.
The tight-knittedness (new word, yay) of many Fediverse applications is part of the reason that is a thing, and the decentralization a.k.a. private ownership by individuals rather than companies of instances means moderation is more meaningful and less robotic. The only bots you should ever see on the Fediverse are purpose-made ones. Examples are the gutenberg bot and various anime photo bots on the other Fediverse sites that are bots made just to post things, no farming incentive.
Completely understand the concept being a bit to grasp, but it should be noticeable to really anyone that it makes for a fairer internet forum than most. Also, I’m a huge fan of FOSS (free open-source software), so the Fediverse has always been a must have for me.
Yeah, plus the PC build is not as discrediting as it is funny and really cringe to watch.
Great to see this stuff come out about Reddit and journalism as of recent, not like it’s our first rodeo with Reddit being pro-censorship.
Not a Beehaw member, but still gotta answer it, lol.
Been enjoying post-modernist books right now, and just straight philosophy. It’s all so intriguing.
Reading the classic White Noise by Don Delillo, in the middle of Discipline and Punish: The Birth of The Prison by Michel Foucault. Finished Shibumi by Trevanian a month or two ago, one of the most funny and badass reads I’ve been through. Looking forward to picking up some Byung Chul Han books after reading a PDF of his book The Burnout Society.