Both were down for me before, they seem to be up right now but just made this account on Lemmy.blahaj.zone (Henry is the name of my actual blahaj lol). It’s probably because of the traffic influx from reddit refugees from the absolutely disastrous spez ama (where he doubles down on everything and doesn’t apologize at all). Allegedly they’re trying to suppress Lemmy mentions but I guess it’s not working well enough lol

A good problem to have although long term we’re going to have to figure out how to deal with these spikes in traffic.

  • eodc
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    1 year ago

    I think the term “forced growth” is a bit unfairly pejorative. Using “force” as a foil to “natural” has the connotation that encouraging people to register and participate by making the process easier is somehow unnatural. Making things easier is what I’m suggesting and it seems like you’re calling that kind of growth “forced”. I’m not suggesting that we make a bunch of fake accounts a la early Reddit to make Lemmy seem more active. We’re not registering the complete number of naturally appearing curious users, and I see that as a problem.

    I think setting it up so that a new user is told ‘You go here, and you sign up on this instance.’ and writing all the onboarding stuff to direct them to the mega-instance for the sake of convenience because we can’t figure out how to make it simpler

    By “make it simpler”, I’m taking you to mean “making the process of finding an instance and registering on that instance so the user can interact with Lemmy simpler”. We both agree that the federated nature of Lemmy is a good thing. But inherent in the federated nature of Lemmy is that there are many instances; whoever wants to interact with Lemmy will need to settle on a home instance. To settle on a home instance, they first need to find an instance.

    What I’m suggesting is that the process of finding an instance already introduces too much friction when someone doesn’t already know what an instance is and how instances interact with each other on the network. Making it simpler, in my opinion, must either consist in explaining what an instance is and how instances interact with each other in at most a sentence, or giving new users a default instance so they don’t have to think about it immediately.

    • cstine@lemmy.uncomfortable.business
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      1 year ago

      Agreed, and that’s my basic point: we need to convey why an instance matters and provide a good way for someone to make an easy choice.

      I wonder if something like what social media sites do in general might help: we let you pick a couple of interests, and you get a list of a small handful of vetted servers (who agree to something like Mastodon’s Server Covenant) to be funneled into. Like, instead of a list of 150, you get… 3.

      Interests may not even be the right thing; maybe server policies and permitted subjects and moderation policies should be what’s asked, idk. But something that filters the numerous servers to a more vetted list without defaulting to just picking a big few feels like a more organic fix.

      I also think the way content is federated right now is utterly confusing, but that feels more like a UI/UX problem that’s fixable than anything else. Server admins may be well served by picking a handful of big communities and federating without any user intervention just so that the basics are populated rather than requiring the users to find and pick communities one by one to federate, as well. The blank slate you get now is very offputting, even IF you know what you’re doing and how to go do it.

      • eodc
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        1 year ago

        Glad we’re in agreement :D

        Yeah, I think having something like an “interest matcher” of sorts on join-lemmy.org would be good.