So, I was kinda idly thinking about how we’re seeing more and more companies such as Reddit give into peer pressure in favor of profit. As their endless stream of investment dollars with the hope of being profitable eventually seems to be running out. How do you see the web moving forward?
Do you think the best way forward, is to go back? I was thinking about it and back in the old days people would have websites that they would host that would make little to no money, they’d just run them for fun, for the passion of it. Do you see these days returning? Lemmy is kind of an example of that, and other federated self-hosted software. It kind of feels like the way things might be headed. People host their own, smaller scale sites, not in pursuit of profits specifically, but for the passion of it.
I honestly think this way of communicating with eachother is more genuine, more real and honestly more optimal. Communications with others shouldn’t entirely hinge upon the will of one soul entity. And while federation definitely has its issues, I personally think it’s vastly better than being ruled by 1 single entity who’s entire goal is to farm as much mindless doomscrolling as possible in pursuit of profits.
Don’t get me wrong, I am not against making money off of your work, I think if you spent time working on something you should absolutely make money off of it. However, I don’t think it’s the way our communication should work. For original content such as art, books, movies, shows, games or other similar mediums, I definitely think that the creator is entitled to make money off of that work.
But having our communication fueled by that sort of business model doesn’t make sense to me. It incentives more harsh restrictions on speech and discussion, restricting user speech/expression to what’s “advertiser friendly” and of course, for harvesting and collecting our personal data like we’re some sort of crop or cattle.
Might’ve gone on a bit of a tangent there, but I hope my general point still got across.
The only reason I ever left classic forums was because they were dying. I resisted coming to Reddit but the community was just too good to pass up, if I needed a guide for some obscure thing it was there! Many of those old forums got rekt due to social conflicts better left dead and buried, but ultimately some of them are still out there, just very slow. Lemmy feels like it’s building enough of a community to be worth it, and there’s no way it’s going to get bought out (right?) The main limiting factor is going to be finances, I assume there’s going to be donation drives or something. That’s going to feel a little clumsy since every instance is going to need its own funding, and the communities you like might not even be on your “home” instance, but I think it will work itself out.
The time when Reddit banned subs like Jailbait and FatPeopleHate was preceeded with a deluge of articles from waning ad-driven media sites (buzzfeed/gawker, wapo, etc). I predict a similar attack on Lemmy if it gets big enough that it can’t be ignored, and IMO it’s well on track to keep growing. I’m curious to see how that goes.