this post was submitted on 20 Aug 2023
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Lemmy.world Support

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Lemmy.world Support

Welcome to the official Lemmy.world Support community! Post your issues or questions about Lemmy.world here.

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This is completely counter productive to growing Lemmy. I absolutely despise discord. Look at the network traffic it generates and tell me wtf they are doing. They won't tell you. Their business model will leave you completely dumbfounded as to how they exist. Everything shared on the platform is lost in a black hole unavailable to the outside world and everything shared is a privacy nightmare. Posting this, pinning it here, and locking it is one of the biggest trolls possible. It pisses me off every time I log in. "Everyone else does it" is the excuse of idiots. Discord makes absolutely no sense to anyone that actually cares to look into it, read the user agreement, and ask sane questions about what they are doing.

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[โ€“] deweydecibel@lemmy.world 6 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

GitHub and Discord are widely considered the best options in their field.

Git, sure, I sold them here anybody complain about it, and get literally is the host for most FOSS, so supporting it isn't exactly hurting the cause. But suggesting Discord is the best depends on how you're judging that criteria. Best for who? Admins or users?

Moreover, if we're going to start getting into the nitty gritty about what the "best" options are in any field, then FOSS dies in most cases. Volunteers simply cannot compete with a bunch of paid developers, but they will do their best.

Plex, for example, blows Jellyfin out of the water in terms of polish and simplicity. If you're judging best on how easy it is, and how likely it is the average person's going to run into issues, Plex beats its FOSS competition by a mile. But that's not the whole story, is it? That doesn't take the enshitification factor into account, or the fact that forces you to pay for certain things that your computer is effectively doing on its own.

But the other thing to remember is that what truly kills FOSS is people just simply not supporting it. The more you use these established, centralized, biggest names, the further you entrench them, and the harder it becomes for any serious alternative to justify its existence.