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this post was submitted on 15 Jun 2023
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Technology
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That's true.
I'm not that invested into Lemmy yet. But if I end up using it as much as reddit, I might do this (sounds like an interesting project anyway).
For now, I'll keep my account in a smaller / more open instance.
If anything, I think reddit was a good lesson on what happens when you let a small group of people control such a large platform. We might run into the same issues if we let a couple of instances get too large.
The first sentence of your last graf makes "might" do some really heavy lifting in the second.
I think we'll see a full spectrum of how people use Lemmy, and I suspect in the long run, self-selection on each instance is going to make federation a far more understandable concept to people with any curiosity about it, and if everyone else wants Reddit, hey, more power to them.
You already see a lot of people congregating in the top Mastodon instances.
People might not understand that they can still communicate with the larger instances (or they might feel like it's a "safer bet" to join the larger ones). Anyway, by the time they understand, they are not gonna create a new account in another instance.
I have so far found that explaining it as being like email (defederation aside) is not helpful.
Really? I've actually found the opposite.
Email is probably the only federated protocol most people still use. So they can get their heads around that.
Email does one thing and is exceedingly good at it. There are no other examples in the modern web I can think of for which there has been zero feature creep. And it is presented to the user as an application of a protocol, not the protocol itself.
That said, the past week has been made it abundantly clear that I have zero knowledge of how most people use internet connections.