This is a chance for any users, admins, or developers to ask anything they’d like to myself, @nutomic@lemmy.ml , SleeplessOne , or @phiresky@lemmy.world about Lemmy, its future, and wider issues about the social media landscape today.

NLNet Funding

First of all some good news: We are currently applying for new funding from NLnet and have reached the second round. If it gets approved then @phiresky@lemmy.world and SleeplessOne will work on the paid milestones, while @dessalines and @nutomic will keep being funded by direct user donations. This will increase the number of paid Lemmy developers to four and allow for faster development.

You can see a preliminary draft for the milestones. This can give you a general idea what the development priorities will be over the next year or so. However the exact details will almost certainly change until the application process is finalized.

Development Update

@ismailkarsli added a community statistic for number of local subscribers.

@jmcharter added a view for denied Registration Applications.

@dullbananas made various improvements to database code, like batching insertions for better performance, SQL comments and support for backwards pagination.

@SleeplessOne1917 made a change that besides admins also allows community moderators to see who voted on posts. Additionally he made improvements to the 2FA modal and made it more obvious when a community is locked.

@nutomic completed the implementation of local only communities, which don’t federate and can only be seen by authenticated users. Additionally he finished the image proxy feature, which user IPs being exposed to external servers via embedded images. Admin purges of content are now federated. He also made a change which reduces the problem of instances being marked as dead.

@dessalines has been adding moderation abilities to Jerboa, including bans, locks, removes, featured posts, and vote viewing.

In other news there will soon be a security audit of the Lemmy federation code, thanks to Radically Open Security and NLnet.

Support development

@dessalines and @nutomic are working full-time on Lemmy to integrate community contributions, fix bugs, optimize performance and much more. This work is funded exclusively through donations.

If you like using Lemmy, and want to make sure that we will always be available to work full time building it, consider donating to support its development. Recurring donations are ideal because they allow for long-term planning. But also one-time donations of any amount help us.

  • OsrsNeedsF2P@lemmy.ml
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    5 months ago

    So many apps die before getting any users. For Lemmy however, when was the first time you really thought “Damn, this thing really might actually take off”?

    • Dessalines@lemmy.mlOPM
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      5 months ago

      For me it was long before the reddit migration (which was ~7 months or so ago). I noticed lemmy slowly but surely gaining traction. It felt more dead than it does now, but the trend was slow and steady growth, which is always a great sign. People were using lemmy, liking it, and sticking around.

      At the same time, it was clear that we weren’t making the mistake of all the other reddit alternatives, by promising to be a free speech haven for bigoted communities. Those people actively did our work for us by warning their communities to stay away from Lemmy and its tankie devs, thereby making Lemmy a much more enjoyable place from the very beginning. That was a crucial test: we were not willing to sacrifice our values for growth’s sake.

      It’s great to see that positivity confirmed by a researcher who did a qualitative and quantitative analysis about Lemmy migration, and finding that >90% of people saw themselves using Lemmy in the long term. We can all be very proud of that, and it means we have a bright future.

    • nutomic@lemmy.mlM
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      5 months ago

      Lemmy was meant to be a Reddit replacement from the beginning, so it was always supposed to take off. Even in the early days the tech was working quite smoothly and users were happy so there was no real doubt about it. The only thing missing were more users. However I had no idea how a real migration would actually look like, so it was really overwhelming when last year people started to flood in and everything got overloaded and broke down.

      • jackpot@lemmy.ml
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        5 months ago

        whats that thing where a company has a ‘we have never been contacted by law enforement or have been forced to disclose data’ sign on their website that theyll take down to implicitly inform users theyve received a request and a silencing order

        • nutomic@lemmy.mlM
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          5 months ago

          Warrant canary. I doubt those really work because law enforcement could easily require you to keep updating it.

    • Steve@communick.news
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      5 months ago

      I’m pretty sure all user data is public already.
      PMs might be the only thing not everyone can see.

      • Deebster@programming.dev
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        5 months ago

        IPs and access logs, plus email addresses aren’t public and are the kind of thing law enforcement wants.

  • sunaurus@lemm.ee
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    5 months ago

    Do you think Lemmy is decentralized enough right now, or are you worried about some of the bigger instances growing too much?

    • Dessalines@lemmy.mlOPM
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      5 months ago

      Its definitely a concern. IMO the lemmyverse is far too centralized at the moment. The big questions are:

      1. Is there a trend toward centralization, or away from it?
      2. How are people being introduced / onboarded onto lemmy?
      3. What can we do to combat centralization?

      (1) I’m honestly unsure, and I’d def appreciate if anyone has done a study of it. We’ve seen a big growth in single person / smaller topic-focused instances, which is a great thing, but if their communities aren’t growing, we need to figure out how to reverse that trend. I’d have no problem with the current large instances, including this one, as long as the long-term-trend is away from them.

      (2) Is mostly word-of-mouth, join-lemmy.org, and apps / web-ui’s which show an instance by default.

      We’ve made the sort for the join-lemmy.org instances page be by random active users, and tried to emphasize on that page that it doesn’t matter which instance you join, since most federate, and can subscribe / connect to any community. I hope that helps, and we need to replicate that wherever we can.

      Apps and webUI’s mostly just show lemmy.world rn, where they should show random instances. I’m guilty of this in Jerboa as well (showing lemmy.ml by default), and I’ve just opened up an issue that it should be showing a random server for anonymous users.

      But I think we need to do more, and I’d def appreciate yours and anyone else’s ideas on how we can combat centralization. We need to get ahead of this problem before it gets worse.

      • Ademir@lemmy.eco.br
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        5 months ago

        But I think we need to do more, and I’d def appreciate yours and anyone else’s ideas on how we can combat centralization.

        I am admin of the biggest Brazilian instance, but I am welcoming more local instances and talking to the admins we should spread the load. But what I notice is the users are concerned they will miss out if they are not in an instance that already have everything.

        Could we have an easier way to auto-federate every new communities from a given instance? Even an “auto-federate everything possible” option. as @nutomic@lemmy.ml said lemmy DB isn’t too big, most instance owners could have it on their servers. And making it opt-in won’t hurt the small instances.

      • OnlyTakesLs@sh.itjust.works
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        5 months ago

        Maybe hide the big instances behind a few clicks? Like you could sort/filter for them, but you’d have to navigate a bit? The average user isn’t going to bother. Like have a default sort that hides the big ones, and a default filter that filters out the top five or whatever.

    • interdimensionalmeme@lemmy.ml
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      5 months ago

      The big instances are bad enough but big communities are absolute killer of decentralisation

      When you go to /c/books on your server, you don’t see an agglomeration of all /c/books on all servers of the fediverse. You only see that server’s /c/books, if it even has one.

      This is a fatal flaw of lemmy which concentrates power enormously into the hands of the owners.

      The default view should be all /c/books on all federated servers, with an easy way to filter only local posts.

      Lemmy will turn into reddit if this is not quickly rectified.

      • sunaurus@lemm.ee
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        5 months ago

        I kind of get where you’re coming from, but to me it sounds like you’re looking for a different experience than what Lemmy is designed for. It seems you are more interested in aggergating all posts about specific topics (like “books”), and strongly limiting the effect of moderation (as nobody would have final say about how to moderate an entire topic). If I correctly understood the experience you’re interested in, then for sure the design of Lemmy will not match that.

        I don’t think it’s fair to describe this as a fatal flaw, though. Lemmy is not built around the idea of generic, “ownerless” topics, instead, it’s built around communities with clear owners. We have decentralization at the admin and infrastructure level (as in, a single admin does not control the entire network), but this does not really mean we also need to have it at individual community level.

        IMO it’s totally fine that different people create different communities with extremely similar purposes. The entire internet as a whole also works like this - the internet itself is decentralized, but at the same time people can create different websites with very similar purposes (and even domains!), and it works out fine. For example, it’s totally possible for there to exist a news.com, news.co.uk, news.ee, news.fi, etc. Imagine if whenever you navigated to news.fi with your browser, it would also automatically insert content from all the other news websites of all possible domains - it doesn’t really seem like a useful feature, but that’s kind of analogous to what you’re suggesting for Lemmy at the moment.

      • Blaze@discuss.online
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        5 months ago

        When you go to /c/books on your server, you don’t see an agglomeration of all /c/books on all servers of the fediverse. You only see that server’s /c/books, if it even has one.

        What prevents from visiting /c/books@anotherserver?

        Genuinely asking, because this is one of the core concepts of Lemmy and federation

        • interdimensionalmeme@lemmy.ml
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          5 months ago

          I already posted to anotherserver/c/books and no one ever saw it.

          Posting anywhere but biggestinstance/c/biggestcommunity is functionally the same as not posting at all.

          And of course, the owners of biggestinstance/c/biggestcommunity believe in everything you don’t believe in and they really don’t like you in particular.

          Welcome to new reddit, same as old reddit

          • Blaze@discuss.online
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            5 months ago

            I already posted to anotherserver/c/books and no one ever saw it.

            Did you promote that community on !newcommunities@lemmy.world and other promotion communities? Did you actively post on your new community, to attract users to your new one?

            I’m going to take two examples I personally had

            I guess that shows that community takeover is possible, and does not need additional tools, just some time and dedication.

    • nutomic@lemmy.mlM
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      5 months ago

      I think its totally normal that instance sizes follow a power law distribution. Its similar to many other things, for example there are few large cities, some medium cities and lots of small cities. The wiki article lists many other examples. So I think its fine as long as there are no intentional attempts to lock in users into large instances or limit federation.

  • GravitySpoiled@lemmy.ml
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    5 months ago

    Is there a public roadmap of some sort?

    Maybe a blog post like “a year in review and what’s up for this year”

    I’m not talking about bugs or minor tweaks. Just a general where are we, where are we coming from and where are we going to? What are important milestones?

    • aeharding@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      I think a lemmy roadmap for the next year is hard, because scope and even individual features depend on funding (for example, nlnet funds specific features).

      Maybe something like Mastodon’s roadmap would be possible though (with no specific timeline)? https://joinmastodon.org/roadmap

      • Steve@communick.news
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        5 months ago

        I wouldn’t put a timeline to it. Just a list of features, broad and specific. As time goes on, they can be marked as “in progress” or “included”. New things can be added over time, or made more specific. All without timetables. For now call it a wishlist.

    • Dessalines@lemmy.mlOPM
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      5 months ago

      I’ve just updated the post body with some updates about this, but if we get approved for another year of funding from NLNet, the the two new devs will be working on these milestones in 2024 (still a draft at this point).

      Being an open source project, we can afford to be less strict about a roadmap, as anyone (including ourselves) can take on any of the open issues on the issue tracker. Part of the fun of these is getting to pick which things you’d like to work on, and that you personally think are important.

      Outside of maintenance-related tasks and merging PRs (which does take a significant chunk of our time) of course @nutomic@lemmy.ml and I both have things we’d like to prioritize this year. My main priorities are:

      • Getting Jerboa as fully functional as lemmy-ui.
      • Notifications (Unified push).
      • Working on lemmy-ui-leptos, our proposed replacement web UI for lemmy-ui written in Rust.
      • Performance improvements (DB, federation code)
      • Stabilizing the API
      • Becoming fully funded by donations, and growing our dev co-op.
    • Blaze@discuss.online
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      5 months ago

      The AMA is upcoming on Friday, it’s not this thread

      Edit: Leaving this here

      • sunaurus@lemm.ee
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        5 months ago

        It’s OK to post questions here:

        Feel free to post and upvote questions beforehand in this post, as it will turn into the AMA tomorrow.

  • OsrsNeedsF2P@lemmy.ml
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    5 months ago

    Not a question, just wanted to let you know I how much we appreciate and love you all for making Lemmy happen 🥰🥰

  • 9point6@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    Firstly, thank you so much for providing the means for me to cut Reddit out of my life, I feel like I’m engaging with content in a much more deliberate way since, and honestly it’s been a massive improvement to my mental health in a way that I was completely oblivious to there even being a problem before.

    Anyway, the question—regarding things happening entirely out of your control, what would be the best and worst things that could happen to lemmy from your perspectives? And as an extension, what are your goals for it?

    • nutomic@lemmy.mlM
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      5 months ago

      The best thing would be if Reddit goes the way of Digg. Seems that will happen sooner or later. The worst thing, maybe if funding stops and we are unable to keep working on Lemmy. But even then admins could still host Lemmy instances.

      • Tangentism@lemmy.ml
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        5 months ago

        The best thing would be if Reddit goes the way of Digg.

        Well, it has already. The only reason it hasn’t fully imploded & all the users deserted for another site, is because there wasn’t an equivalent place to go to.

        They were sort of parallel in development but digg blew up and Reddit didn’t then Digg took a quick hard turn towards enshitification.

        Reddit has done the enshitification but like a parasitic infected spider, it’s wandering about and most of the users haven’t realised yet that it’s an empty shell.

        It’s slow demise would be better in the long run than a quick collapse like Diggs so it’s now putrid culture is not transmitted with an enmass exodus.

    • Dessalines@lemmy.mlOPM
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      5 months ago

      Thx! Its pretty wild to me how much these algorithms, and formats, affect our mental well-being. Those giant US tech companies employing Psychology PhDs to figure out how to keep people angry, engaged, and watching ads, is doing so much harm to so many people, not just in the US, but the whole world, and unfortunately very few countries are doing enough to protect their people from these companies (who also act as surveillance arms of the US state) by blocking facebook and the rest.

      I’ve seen two professors I respected turn into angry children on twitter, in a way that would never happen in real life. Reddit, twitter, and Youtube platform reactionary rage-bait to get people trapped in a downward spiral of negativity. These companies do not care how much damage they do; all that matters to them is their profits.

      We don’t have those same incentive structures, so we can and should be doing everything we can to make this a positive and enjoyable experience, not about arguing constantly, but about learning, laughing, and understanding.

      what would be the best and worst things that could happen to lemmy from your perspectives? And as an extension, what are your goals for it?

      The best thing would be that we continue our slow and steady growth. Every user that migrates away from big tech to the fediverse is victory, so while we shouldn’t emphasize growth at any cost, its still a good thing when we can get people away from all that negativity.

      The biggest concern for me about Lemmy, would be a centralization onto one big server, that tries to replicate all the worst things and behaviors about reddit: its combativeness, xenophobia, bigotry, pro-US-foreign policy agendas, and advertising. There is a noticeable chunk of Lemmy’s users who don’t really see any problem with those things, they just want a reddit that lets them use 3rd party apps again.

  • Vinegar@kbin.social
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    5 months ago

    Thank you! Lemmy is a tremendous contribution to the wider Fediverse, and no amount of “thank yous” is ever enough for people like you writing free software and giving freely to the public domain.

    I have been on Lemmy, and around the Fediverse on various accounts since ~2021, and a suggestion I have seen promoted countless times is for communities which federate across instances. e.g. posts to Linux@lemmy.ml will show on Linux@lemmy.world as long as lemmy.ml and lemmy.world federate with one another. If I remember correctly, each of you have previously opposed this idea for multiple reasons. If you do still oppose such a feature, will you please reiterate why you think this is the wrong direction for Lemmy? Also, have you considered adding a multi-community feature similar to Reddit’s multi-reddit feature which allows end-users to combine multiple federated communities into a single page just for them?

  • Calavera@lemm.ee
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    5 months ago

    Were you ever approached by any kind of organization making some weird proposal regarding lemmy?

    • Dessalines@lemmy.mlOPM
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      5 months ago

      A few, mostly harmless tho, just about working on pet features they’d like to see in Lemmy. None panned out.

      I imagine the more parasitic companies avoid us as soon as they see the AGPLv3 license.

    • nutomic@lemmy.mlM
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      5 months ago

      Some company (dont know which) wanted to make a one-time donation of 500 Euros to get listed as donor on join-lemmy.org. Rejected because thats only for recurring donors. Does this count as weird?

  • mrmanager@lemmy.today
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    5 months ago

    What are the plans around admin tools?

    Instance owners currently gets notified when someone has reported a user for spamming or trolling, but frequently it’s a user that is not on his instance, so he can’t do anything about it. Wouldn’t it be better if instance owners got notified only when they can take actual action (like the user being registered on their instance)?

    • Possibly linux@lemmy.zip
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      5 months ago

      I have seen this first hand. I think when someone hits report it needs to go to the moderator of the community. From there the mod should be able to forward it to where it needs to go.

      Instance admins should be able to intersect this process.

  • SubArcticTundra@lemmy.ml
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    5 months ago

    Do you have any estimate of how much storage (in GB) all the posts ever posted across Lemmy have taken up, to date? (Excluding media)

  • toastal@lemmy.ml
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    5 months ago

    Will the source code ever move off of proprietary Microsoft GitHub where users need to have an account to contribute & search code—or certain users are blocked due to US sanctions? If the idea is wanting to stand up against centralized US-corpo-controlled social media for forums, why use that US-megacorpate-controlled code forge / social media platform?

  • OsrsNeedsF2P@lemmy.ml
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    5 months ago

    How do you feel about extreme right-wing instances like the late Wolfballs using Lemmy to promote and spread hate?

    • Dessalines@lemmy.mlOPM
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      I very much dislike it obviously, and I’m happy that one shut down. There have been others, but for the most part they’ve stayed away from Lemmy as “that software made by tankies.”

      Outside of making sure that we don’t platform them anywhere, there isn’t much we can do. Lemmy is open-source software after all, and a tool can be used for good or ill. As @CannotSleep420@lemmygrad.ml mentioned, coordinating on adding them to our blocklists and isolating them is the best option.

  • Ademir@lemmy.eco.br
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    5 months ago

    What could be done to improve interoperability between federated platforms?
    mainly talking about Mastodon since it is the biggest one.

    I have seen the Peertube dev is quite nice and approachable. And willing to improve the experience cross-platform.

    Have you tried to approach @Gargron@mastodon.social? Is he willing to contribute? How could we get Mastodon to improve the user experience with federated content, eg. communities and article posts?

    What about @dansup@lemmy.ml / @dansup@mastodon.social and Pixelfed?

      • spaduf@slrpnk.net
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        5 months ago

        While I agree with the content of that article I don’t know if we should give up on Eugen just yet. The Mastodon team has not disclosed what their plan is regarding the groups rework currently on the mastodon roadmap. There is an old proposal here, but I think we have good reason to believe that implementation will be revisited. To that end, it is very important to advocate for the adoption of FEP-1b12 which is the standard that Lemmy uses.

        It may also be a good idea to advocate for the adoption of FEP-d36d both here and on lemmy. This is a standard for group-to-group following. Effectively allowing communities to subscribe to other communities.

        Here’s a slightly older but fairly comprehensive write-up of the situation: https://blog.erlend.sh/group-convergence