chromodynamic

joined 1 month ago
 

I was thinking about account portability. While I haven't had to migrate instances myself, it does seem like it would be highly inconvenient. How do you let people know it's the same account?

The traditional way is to leave a notice on the old account, but what if that's not possible (e.g. the old instance shut down suddenly). It would be better to have a way to automatically let people (and instances) know that the new account is the same user as the old one - so that subscribers stay subscribed, and there is no confusion.

With optional cryptographic signing for account identity, this issue could be ameliorated. The user could keep the private key, and share the public key with Fediverse instances.

What do you think?

Please note: I'm not talking about replacing any existing functionality, only adding to it.

[–] chromodynamic@piefed.social 5 points 5 days ago

If you want to message them about it, now is the time most likely to work.

[–] chromodynamic@piefed.social 1 points 6 days ago

Good point about the unintentional votes. Maybe just a temporary suspension then.

[–] chromodynamic@piefed.social 3 points 1 week ago

I thought of another one. In this age of decreasing digital freedom, PieFed (and every other website) should allow people to register multiple email addresses, in case a user suddenly loses access to one.

[–] chromodynamic@piefed.social 3 points 1 week ago (1 children)

Yeah, I'm not sure why people want that. In all honestly I wouldn't implement it if it were me, but if you do I suggest restricting it to communities with the same topic, or maybe even restricting it to communities with the exact same name.

[–] chromodynamic@piefed.social 3 points 1 week ago (2 children)

I don't know if these already exist, but thinking long-term of how to prevent Reddit-like problems:

  • An option to move a post to a different community (with the agreement of the other community's moderators) if the post is in the wrong community, but otherwise seems valid/good-faith/high-effort/etc.

  • And for the opposite situation where the post is just garbage, but highly upvoted by bots/brigading, there could be a "nuke it from orbit" option that not only deletes it and bans the poster, but also bans everyone that upvoted it.

[–] chromodynamic@piefed.social 5 points 1 week ago (4 children)

Another reason is to avoid the Reddit problem of people upvoting of off-topic posts by people who don't pay attention to what community it's posted in. I don't think Piefed/Lemmy/etc. has those kind of users (yet) but it's good future-proofing.

[–] chromodynamic@piefed.social 6 points 1 week ago

I've often felt that the web should work more like Git, so you can keep the content locally and just pull updates when you need.

[–] chromodynamic@piefed.social 6 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

You can view and post in channels on other instances from your home instance without switching. For example, I'm commenting from piefed.social

[–] chromodynamic@piefed.social 17 points 2 weeks ago (3 children)

The term "social media" is already toxic. When I started using the Internet, socialising and media were two separate things. Conflating the two implies that every time we say something, we are publishing an article and should care about how many views and likes we get, instead of making a genuine attempt at connection. And it suggests that every reply should be some kind of review of the post it replies to.

In the days of forums, people would just post what came into mind. They were more honest because there was no number next to your comment rating how good it was.

[–] chromodynamic@piefed.social 55 points 2 weeks ago (5 children)

Client-side scripting is a hack. HTML didn't have all the tags people wanted or needed, so instead of carefully updating it to include new features, they demanded that browsers just execute arbitrary code on the user's computer, and with that comes security vulnerabilities, excessive bandwidth use and a barrier-to-entry that makes it difficult to develop new browsers, giving one company a near-monopoly.

[–] chromodynamic@piefed.social 8 points 2 weeks ago

Quite the opposite in fact. Microtransactions offer the promise of fun, but never deliver, because in order to incentivise users to purchase them, the player must feel like the game is 90% of the way to being fun and that tiny additional purchase will get it there.

It's like the cartoon image of the donkey rider holding a carrot on the end of a rod. The donkey keeps moving to try to get the carrot, but never quite reaches it.

[–] chromodynamic@piefed.social 10 points 2 weeks ago

Quite the opposite in fact. Microtransactions offer the promise of fun, but never deliver, because in order to incentivise users to purchase them, the player must feel like the game is 90% of the way to being fun and that tiny additional purchase will get it there.

It's like the cartoon image of the donkey rider holding a carrot on the end of a rod. The donkey keeps moving to try to get the carrot, but never quite reaches it.

 

I was looking at Voyager on my phone and saw communities I hadn't subscribed to in my home feed, and upvotes on posts I hadn't voted on (or even seen before). When I tried to remove the upvotes, a message said "problem voting, please try again".

Thankfully, when I view PieFed through Firefox, these problems don't exist, so it must be the app. Not overly surprising since it was initially developed for Lemmy, I believe.

Not sure what changed to cause this problem or whether the change was in Voyager or PieFed.

 

I'm sure there are some good reasons, but I don't know what those reasons are.

I've noticed that sometimes the instance of the community doesn't match the instance of the user who posted there, and I was wondering why they chose to post to that community instead of an equivalent one on the instance they joined. Are there pros and cons to doing this?

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