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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 16th, 2023

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  • I literally just had a friend tell me he joined Threads and how neat it was, etc etc and when I explained why I wouldn’t be joining him, he basically just gave me the old “Well I already know they have all my information so it doesn’t matter”

    …like wtf? So you just…give up having any privacy whatsoever? I just couldn’t respond to him after that, I don’t really know how to respond to that. There’s a disease spreading in the world unfortunately and it isn’t just COVID. It’s one called Apathy and too many people are coming down with it.








  • I posted a similar comment elsewhere but along the same line of thought: The sad thing is that the masses that are still on Reddit at this point dgaf and will likely stay on Reddit forever. There’s a real problem of Apathy in today’s culture when people are just jonesing for their fix of daily content/memes, or at the very least nothing that disrupts the status quo. They don’t give a fuck about “ideals” or what corporations do or farm from them so long as their instant gratification and daily intake of said content remains unchanged.




  • Long post/response incoming so apologies in advance (tl;dr is near the bottom in bold).

    You are correct; Think of it like emails. Particularly the @outlook vs @gmail vs @yahoo, except with @lemmy and @kbin.

    You can have a JohnJacob372@lemmy and a JohnJacob372@kbin and it be two separate people with the same username, but different “instances” just like email addresses.

    The point is though, that everything that’s part of the “fediverse” (Lemmy and Kbin are two of the biggest but there also exist others like Fedia.io) is connected in a way that if you’re on one, you can see posts from the others. Ex: If JohnJacob372@lemmy posts an article on Lemmy, it’ll show up on your kbin feed/frontpage and you can comment on it along with the lemmy folks.

    You can tell where it originated from because it’ll say next to the username and magazine (magazine is what you might call a subreddit, but again, you can have same named subs as well, one on Kbin and one on Lemmy). Ex: JohnJacob372@lemmy.world 2 hours ago to LlamaAppreciation@lemmy.world.

    If you don’t see the @ part after the name or magazine, it means it was posted by someone on your same instance (otherwise it would be “redundant” to say “JohnJacob372 from your neighborhood on Main Street just posted a flyer in your neighborhood on Main Street” when you can just say “JohnJacob372 posted a flyer on Main Street”).

    So recap (tl;dr):
    Instance = Platform (like Lemmy and Kbin)
    Magazine = Subreddit
    Username@InstanceA can post on Subreddit@InstanceA, and Anyone@InstanceA can read posts on AnySubreddit@AnyInstance (so long as the instance is “federated” i.e. part of the Fediverse Network like Lemmy and Kbin).

    Hopefully that helps. You can stop here if you don’t want to be confused more, but I will say this:

    It may be beneficial, at least in the early days, to have an account on different instances. Mainly because each instance is ran on personal servers by individuals which can have a lot of problems, especially when they are overloaded (like during large migrations from Reddit to here). Having an account on another Instance is like having another account on another Server that can still access the same posts, but because it’s a different server, it might be up and running while the other is down for maintenance.

    Ideally, apps will eventually be able to switch between instances automatically, but for now, it’s easier for app developers to focus on one instance at a time which is why you see different apps for Lemmy and Kbin. This is where my own understanding could be fuzzy because afaik you should still be able to access posts from both (all) instances, it’s just that you would need to have an account on the instance/server that app is based on. So an app for Lemmy means you would need to have a Lemmy account, but you should still be able to access/read content posted on Kbin. I think. I could be wrong and you can only see/access content on Lemmy if that’s the case. But even then, it won’t be forever. These things take time but it’s definitely an achievable goal.


  • While corporate greed has been a problem since the Reagan administration, we’re seeing an unprecedented jump in greed these past couple of years by companies all suddenly trying to squeeze out every last drop from people. Netflix with it’s disabling of user password sharing, Twitter and all it’s checkmark BS (with this login wall being the latest example), Reddit and it’s API changes, and YouTube experimenting with blocking people who use adblockers. All to name a few. It really is spiraling out of control and unchecked, but sadly we lack a proper government (at least in the US, though there may still be some hope in the EU) to stand up to them.




  • Humans are gonna human unfortunately. Biologically I’m not convinced we are capable of eliminating war because humans are competitive by nature. To the point that there will always be one group or another trying to force its ideals onto another.

    I’ve often thought about “what if we could snap our fingers and every weapon beyond that of a spear (technologically) was vanished, and any/every attempt to fashion something deadlier would fail/poof out of existence as well.”

    That might stave off large scale war but there would still be tribal warring on a smaller scale I fear. Plus a ton of other issues that would arise from suddenly having no guns/missiles/projectiles/etc.