That’s the beauty of multiple instances. As long as people push heading to join-lemmy.org over any one particular instance, things should be mostly okay.
I signed up from prgrmaming.dev and I really like the function of being able to sign up within a different community that you can choose.
Yep, if they can find a smaller, specialised, or localised instance it is better for the network for them to join that and learn to subscribe to others rather than lumping on one big server.
It’s just a little awkward for new users to subscribe and navigate across instances at the moment, but new features and “gasp” third party apps can make that easier.
On the other hand sending people to a list of servers that includes stuff like lemmygrad and yiffit pretty high on the list is… a potential turnoff
There is https://lemmyverse.net/ as an alternative, I don’t see any immediately shady communities in the top of the listing. Though it does put lemmy.ml as #1, which isn’t ideal since it’d probably draw a lot of people right to it.
I prefer https://lemmyverse.net
I prefer https://lemmyverse.net/communities
Lemmy.World by far has a stronger server than lemmy.ml you can get details here and here I think Lemmy.World is by far in a better position than the rest so they might be okay? Lemmy.ml is still struggling.
He’s doing good work. Love how transparent he is.
Do we really think there’s going to be that many more users joining once the API policy goes into effect? I feel like most people who were going to leave Reddit have already left. Idk, I could be wrong. But why would people be back there if they’re just going to leave in July?
I think there’ll be a lot more, since so far people have only left for ideological reasons. Once they actually lose access to reddit via third party apps, it’ll be a lot easier to justify moving on.
And there are probably people still hoping that reddit will reverse their decision or somehow fix things before the changes take effect.
I am in this boat. Comments by spez make a reversal seem impossible at this point…but I’m still using Reddit through Apollo until Apollo is disabled.
I read about 3% of Reddit users use a third party app, which doesn’t sound like a lot but Reddit has millions of users.
And the people who use third party apps tend to be the powerusers. Or at least the ones actually posting content.
It’s not only about apps, but the attitude of the administration.
Ghostbanning and removing communities before, removing API now, what is going to be next?
I moved from Pikabu to Reddit cos of the same attitude issues and original Pikabu is gone to be an absolute shite now.
I agree. I could see a few extra users joining, but I don’t think it will be a flood.
When the 3PAs are actually gone and when they open Apollo or other app, that user is not going to be ok with the official Reddit app and they’ll look for an alternative. I bet a bunch end up on Lemmy or kbin.
I think a couple of powerusers, that still hoped to change something with the blackout, will check Lemmy out after the new policy started. But I don’t expect a huge wave.
It’ll be gradual I think. The biggest influx was likely Tuesday and Wednesday.
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What monitoring data does a Lemmy instance export? Can it be easily monitored from, e.g., Prometheus?
They have an env var for an Open Telemetry endpoint in the docker config.
Sweet. I’m thinking of bringing up an instance and would like to be a competent SRE for it. :)
Be the change you want to see in the world! And also share your graphs with the rest of us 😁
Is there a site that tracks telemetry of all federated instances? I’d love to be able to quickly check if a remote instance is having issues.
Not that I know of but I’ve found a couple of stats pages in my travels:
By joining FMHY! FTW
There was criticism on the lack of moderation tools which could neccessitate to close registration.