indigomirage

joined 1 year ago
[–] indigomirage@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

My thinking is that they'd buy it to harvest the data for AI training.

The user experience is pretty much secondary to the strategic play here.

Reddit's value is in the body of data its amassed, not in the ongoing service to users it provides. Limiting 3rd party access is all about protecting that and has the added benefit (to them, not the users) of creating a walled garden where they can increase the (meagre) margins from advertisors by controlling the data flow to users.

Not saying I am a fan of all this, I'm just recognizing the situation.

I really don't know though...

[–] indigomirage@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago (4 children)

I wonder about the odds that Google would buy reddit. Not saying it's a good thing, but it could be a strategic play for them.

 

Hi there -

I'm trying to dive into the fediverse and am debating kbin vs lemmy instances. My question is on how people approach dealing with with communities /magazines that share names, subject matter between the various instances.

For example - the "Fediverse" magazine in kbin.social is not the same as the "Fediverse" community in lemmy.world (they obviously have different namespaces) but the content is often similar and the subject matter is pretty much the same. (I imagine other implementations will have their own flavours too.)

As a user, how do you decide which is the optimal one to follow? Do you subscribe to each? Can you cross post between them? Could/would the magazines/communities eventually merge?

I get that everything is federated and things will congeal to have some being more dominant (or not) over time, but coming from a reddit world, it's definitely a bit more daunting. This is ok. Change is good - just looking at how people tend to approach this.

Do you have accounts at multiple servers? Do you pick one and subscribe from all over?

Interested in hearing how you tackle it.

Cheers!