TheFogan

joined 1 year ago
[–] TheFogan@lemmy.world 4 points 8 months ago

Not to mention, it's really hard to pass time.

[–] TheFogan@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago

Point is, a hash isn't a password. giving the most you don't need tech knowledge analogy, it's like the passwords fingerprint.

The police station may keep your daughters fingerprint so that if they find a lost child they can recognize it is your daughter beyond any doubt. Your daughters fingerprints, is like a hash, your daughter is a password.

The police should not store your daughter... that's bad practice. The fingerprints are all they should store, and needless to say the fingerprints aren't your daughter, just as a hash isn't a password.

[–] TheFogan@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I mean short and long term there's pros and cons to that. however there's a reason why that started to fall appart with e-mail. In short if it gets popular, than hosting servers with no throttling or post limits means spammers are going to go crazy, and rather than play the never ending unwinnable whack a mole game as bad actors create thousands of instances a day, hosts of any instances worth targetting will have to do a "instances are assumed malicious until proven benign", (IE a whitelist method)

[–] TheFogan@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago

I don't think it's the existance of big providers, as much as the general problem of spam, lemmy will likely have this too one day if it grows big, with or without big corporate backed lemmy's. Fact is, it's trivial to set up an e-mail server, and have it send millions of spam messages a day to thousands of addresses. You can then register dozens of domain names for a few dollars, and fill the internet with millions of spam messages.

Which is why pretty much all e-mail servers default anything that isn't known to be throttled (IE a gmail account won't let you just send as many messages as your bandwidth can handle). A black list whack a mole is basically an unwinnable battle on that front, all anti-spam measures kind of have to start with a "prove you aren't a spammer then we'll whitelist you", rather than the opposite.

But the main point still remains, there are dozens of e-mail providers that have proven they aren't spam, and more or less ones that meet every overall goal one might have. Ones that don't track you or put ads (some you may have to pay for, but that's the options). Still 100x healthier than say facebook and twitter where you consent to all their tracking and rules, or you can't talk to their members ever.

[–] TheFogan@lemmy.world 37 points 1 year ago (13 children)

Yeah on the whole it could be good, In the same way that it isn't a problem that google owns the most popular e-mail service, that doesn't hurt those on proton mail or any other mail service, and in fact offers benefits that they can just as easilly e-mail their friends using gmail from their preffered mail service. The real fear is the embrace extend extinguish. IE if meta encourages people to join their instance, then gradually makes things incompatible after major communities move to them, but they can't prevent us from moving back just the same even if they somehow got us to jump there.

[–] TheFogan@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

Well that's also where fediverse is a perk. There are, and likely will always be parallel channels on different instances. IE so while lemmy.ml may have the largest asklemmy, there probably will be smaller less active asklemmy's on other instances.

[–] TheFogan@lemmy.world 10 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Personally my biggest distrust of nord comes from their ads. Most notably one where they anthromorphized a guys smart TV, Roomba and phone talking about him when he leaves the room, and others that basically totally misrepresent what a vpn does.

In short, your TV, Phone, etc... most likely share and compile information because of the ACCOUNTS they need to function. using a VPN will do NOTHING to stop google from knowing any android data, Your devices don't hear eachother by listening to the network, which is almost all going to be encrypted protocols anyway, but by sharing accounts.

In short, I've always found nords comercials constantly misleading on what a VPN can and can't protect you from, and to me it seems that's largely so they can market them to people who don't actually have any use for them, and worse doing it to make people feel like they are "protecting themselves" from something that they are just as vulnerable to with the vpn.

[–] TheFogan@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago (3 children)

You just put in the community after the url of your instance

say in your case.

https://lemm.ee/c/Minecraft@kbin.social

for your example. Then just hit the subscribe in the top right.

[–] TheFogan@lemmy.world 7 points 1 year ago

Any instance hitting one million is unlikely, on the mere grounds of trying to make one super instance is kind of the opposite of the goal of federation. The winning would be reaching a million members between all instances.

[–] TheFogan@lemmy.world 10 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Simply put, I disagree.

Here's the fact of small groups that are made for the "outs". The same pattern we've seen for every single "free speach" social media site. Bottom line is every social media site, has some level of what I'd agree is bad moderation that's blatently banning people for say things like saying things to address police violence, income inequality etc... Things that are legitimate subjects that should be open to discussion.

However, 90% of people who get banned from social media, are people doing things that no one outside of their echo chamber want to be anywhere near, literal pro Nazi's, White Supremicists etc...

The problem is, in general say if we magically turned all moderation off on say facebook, and let everyone back on, that would be relatively low impact, the non nazi's would be 99%, the nazi's would be the relatively small niche.

However, most people aren't leaving their existing social media websites. Which means people looking for new social network sites, are disproportionately people that no one wants to be associated with. So when a new social media site opens up, promising not to moderate them... (Miwi, Truth, Gab, Parlor etc...). in 2 seconds it becomes flooded with people that, quite simply put scare off anyone who isn't them away.

So long and short, in a new social network, if you don't keep out the very extreme. You'll never be able to develop a community around that isn't extremes.

[–] TheFogan@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago

Nah wouldn't say reddit's implimenting of dumb features was the problem, I mean new reddit sucked but nobody really quit when they still had old.reddit.com. The killer was removing good features.

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