this post was submitted on 23 Mar 2024
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That river analogy is somewhat flawed, in that there are several levels to federation on Lemmy/Mastodon/etc:
Fediverse's default, is every user building their own "whitelist" out of people they decide to follow. Aggregate feeds like "Local" or "All", or the search feature, are optional discovery tools. Lemmy also adds "curated users" in the form of communities, which are still optional.
There could be more (mod) tools to curate these feeds for those that want to shape them, but it seems to me like the "federation problem" is more one of personal education, of asking for "someone else", or "an algorithm", to curate a single feed that people can follow... which is inherently contrary to the freedom of a federated system.
I agree, but my point wasn't a perfect analogy. I merely intended to point out the considerable difference in the workload of the two 'extreme' approaches.
User-defined filtering is also very nice to have, but I feel like instance-level filtering is what gives an instance its unique look-and-feel. And from what I've read, Beehaw has also defederated from certain instances 'only' because moderating all the undesirable stuff coming from there put too much of a strain on the mod team. Hence my river analogy.
My personal opinion is that federation is a wonderful concept, but it sometimes comes at a cost that may outweigh its benefits.
Beehaw needed to:
...the only mod tool available, was defederation. This is a clear shortcoming of the tools, which right now only allow an "all or nothing" approach, not of the federation itself.
Not exactly; the rules and community of an instance, are what give that "unique look-and-feel".
In an alternative reality, with a slightly different approach to federation, an "instance" could be a curated preset the user imports into their client.
Actually, that could be done with the Fediverse, if someone decided to do it.