deleted by creator
deleted by creator
deleted by creator
Pretty much my thoughts as well.
My bet is that they’re going to allow other people from the fediverse to post on it but won’t allow instagram users to see other instances. Wouldn’t want your customers getting off the official servers now.
It’s weird that the Y-axis starts at 1000 users, it makes it look like Lemmy was dead before people started moving. Exciting stats nonetheless.
Aside from the fact that I don’t think this law will pass, I doubt it’ll be effective at all. Companies will just move AI training to countries where it is legal. The most the EU can do right now is play whack-a-mole and start blocking AIs that don’t meet its requirements, but at that point people will just host mirrors or use a VPN. It’s just not enforceable, and the EU knows that, which is why they’re so stressed out trying to figure out a reasonable law regarding AI.
Here you go: https://fedidb.org/software/lemmy
The graphs themselves stop at May though, and it’s likely the data used is a bit delayed. Still, it’s a pretty good source.
The licensing doesn’t matter, most AI are trained off proprietary and copyrighted data. There’s still a lot of talks in governments about whether this is legal or not, but at this point the cat’s out of the bag and I doubt we’ll regress back to using smaller amounts of data.
I think it’s a servers thing. Lemmy.ml is under a lot of pressure lately.
Adding to what the other guy said, you can think of Lemmy as a collection of servers. Right now you’re on lemmy.ml, but some people are on https://beehaw.org/ for example. Beehaw is also Lemmy, but it’s a different server with different users and communities.
Here’s what makes the Fediverse cool though. You don’t need to go there to interact with them. You can stay on lemmy.ml and access and comment on Beehaw. When you’re on the home page it defaults to “Local”, but if you click on “All” you can see posts from different servers. Same thing when you click on “Communities” at the top. It lets you browse communities on different servers by clicking “All”.
Let’s say you wanted to browse the gaming community on Beehaw. You can write “gaming” in the search field and find gaming@beehaw.org, or you can just type it into your search bar as https://lemmy.ml/c/gaming@beehaw.org
Now you can browse, comment, vote, and interact with that community. I posted this comment from https://kbin.social/ , which is NOT Lemmy, but since the Fediverse is connected we can basically interact with each other from different websites.
Same boat here. Been using RiF for almost a decade now and have no intention of using the terrible privacy hell Reddit app. There’s potential here to be a viable alternative.
I never really liked Twitter as a concept. It feels like it’s built on an “old man yells at cloud” concept where people just shout their thoughts and nobody gains anything from it.
By comparison forums are there to foster discussions and communities. I thought Mastodon would be better but I spent 5 minutes and it’s exactly the same nonsense.
I’m not quite sure how exactly everything works but it seems like a lot of things on kbin get thrown to /m/random, does anyone know what’s up with that? A lot of communities from lemmy show up as a 404 and posts end up there.
Good luck enforcing something like that.
Mostly aesthetically, but also since Linux Mint is a very stable distro updates are usually slow and the packages it uses are often a little outdated. If you’re the type of person to want to update to the newest thing as soon as it’s out, then it’s probably not for you.