• @Fisch@lemmy.ml
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      622 months ago

      It started getting popular years ago and that’s when me an my friends switched to it too (back when I didn’t know shit about privacy). You gotta keep in mind the alternatives back then were Skype, which was meant for 1 to 1 calls, had shit audio quality and issues all the time and TeamSpeak, which was complicated because you needed a server (we were kids, we only knew what a server was from Minecraft) and had a text chat that was only a small part of the bottom of the window that was full of connected and disconnected messages, so I actually didn’t even know you could write in that. TeamSpeak’s interface also isn’t exactly good-looking or very intuitive. Then came Discord, you could create a server for you and your friends for free, you saw who of your friends was online and playing what, you could see when someone was in a voice channel and could just join, you had multiple text chats where you could easily send a link or memes while playing and you could easily share your screen with the others. It was a major improvement over the other two. I know that it sucks from a privacy standpoint but there’s good reasons why people started using it.

    • NostraDavid
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      302 months ago

      It was my replacement of Skype, which was leaning hard into its enshittification around that time.

    • @Omega_Haxors@lemmy.ml
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      COVID got people used to video/audio communication, then the other platforms enshitified while discord remained as shit as they always were.

    • @helenslunch@feddit.nl
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      122 months ago

      Same as any of the modern enshittified services. It used to be really good. Once they got a large userbase it was time to extract value from the users. The users never have the self-respect to leave, so there they stay.

    • @Jarix@lemmy.world
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      22 months ago

      How familiar are you with IRC?

      I was told by someone that IRC is kind of what discord is built on. Maybe the answer is someone in that relation, if what i was told is accurate or not

      • poVoq
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        112 months ago

        Discord copies a lot of concepts from IRC, like servers and threads are almost identical. But it isn’t technically based on IRC. Maybe your friend mixed it up with Twitch chat which is actual IRC only slightly modified.

    • Night Monkey
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      People love discord. When Microsoft tried to buy it, people freaked out. They turned down the multi billion dollar offer. IMO, I don’t believe the paid portion of the app is worth the money because it’s mostly cosmetic bullshit. They don’t give me a good reason to give them money

      • Gunpachi
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        102 months ago

        I also think discord nitro is kind of B.S . The only reason I still use discord is because my friends use it.

        I wish there were similar features in Matrix clients like Element. Just the voice channels feature will be enough for me.

        Revolt chat is a good alternative. It lacks in features but its pretty good for an FOSS project. I tried to convince my friends to use it but they crawled back to discord after 2 days.

      • @helenslunch@feddit.nl
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        52 months ago

        They don’t give me a good reason to give them money

        The constant harassment was enough to get me to pay for it. But guess what? After I paid for it, the harassment continued, trying to get me to give them even more money for products I don’t even understand. And that’s just not something I tolerate.

        That + the inevitable data-mining + refusal to provide any sort of deletion tools = no more Discord for me. I use Revolt now when I need that sort of thing.

    • @nintendiator@feddit.cl
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      42 months ago

      It’s incredible, yes, even more considering that Discord has been complicit on spam attacks on the Fediverse.

  • @Caligvla@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    742 months ago

    Can’t wait for the day Discord backstabs everyone and people decide to get the fuck away from it. I seriously can’t stand having to search past troubleshooting messages, it’s a fucking mess, almost unusable. Whoever uses Discord as a Forum seriously needs a full force punch in the mouth.

    • @roguetrick@lemmy.world
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      82 months ago

      Well that’s no better than searching IRC logs, which are something folks have absolutely done in the past. I still haven’t figured out why folks like discord so much though.

      • @Psythik@lemmy.world
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        72 months ago

        People like it cause when it first came out, it was considerably better than other popular voice chat software available for PC games at the time, like TeamSpeak and Ventrillo. But most importantly: it was free, unlike those other two. So people flocked to it and it blew up big, leading us to where we are today.

    • @dumpsterlid@lemmy.world
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      32 months ago

      Can’t wait for the day Discord backstabs everyone and people decide to get the fuck away from it.

      I can’t wait either, then maybe all the communities that disappeared into discord that I feel unable to actually feel like I am a genuine member of and connect with anymore because I am not part of the conversations on discord will go somewhere where I can be a part of them again.

      sigh

      FUCK DISCORD

  • @ryven@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    672 months ago

    I’m on board with this, but I may be biased because I also don’t like using Discord for anything else. Every time someone sends me a Discord invite I feel a little defeated, because it is usually after I have agreed to participate in something.

    • @ikidd@lemmy.world
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      I feel that way about Teams/Sharepoint/Office. I’m happy to serve on a board or committe, until I find out they’re using Teams or Sharepoint. Microsoft’s SSO is a fucking mess. Put in your email to get a one-time code, get that code and enter it, then it logs you in and asks for an email address to be added to the account. Add the same email address you just got the code via, and it tells you it can’t use that email address. But if I don’t use that email address, it won’t let me into the Sharepoint docs.

      It’s just a fucking nightmare. I fucked around with one committee trying to get the accounts deleted and done the Microsoft TM way and finally gave up and bowed out of that group.

    • @Duamerthrax@lemmy.world
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      32 months ago

      It’s an upgrade over Skype, but a downgrade over forums and irc. I setup a discord for some tech troubled friends because I didn’t think they could handle anything else and even that was trying for some of them.

  • db0
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    652 months ago

    As someone deeply involved in Foss for many years and with multiple large Foss services running on my back, these constant requests for purity from outsiders will go nowhere until volunteers people step up to do the hard work of setting up and maintaining the infrastructure and management of such Foss solutions in the place of the core developers

    • @Cataphract@lemmy.ml
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      232 months ago

      ? What’s the difference between setting up a free forum (they’re everywhere) versus setting up Discord channels? It’s the exact same process.

      • NostraDavid
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        312 months ago

        a free forum

        “Oh great, I’ll have to create another fucking account” - me, already having some 300 accounts in my key-vault…

        • @Cataphract@lemmy.ml
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          202 months ago

          I’m not sure what point you’re trying to make unless you’re saying no one has to create a Discord account, or have to download an app, or have to find an invite to locate the server. My keys are auto-generated and auto-saved, simple 20 second process. Forums are also a lot easier to sign up for than Discord, if you’re worried about making another account I don’t know what to tell ya because every service requires it.

          • @B0rax@feddit.de
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            132 months ago

            You set up a discord account once. When you want to join a project discord all you have to do is click the invite link and hit „accept“. Bam. Done. No need to join a forum. No need to keep track of another website and check if you got a personal message from someone or something. The benefit is that it is all one location.

            • @Abnorc@lemm.ee
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              122 months ago

              It’s undoubtedly nice during that step of the process, but afterwards you’re on a platform that may not be well suited to the purpose. It’d be better just to make the new account on an actual forum. Granted, I use Bitwarden now, so I don’t sweat making new accounts anymore.

              This makes me wonder if there is a centralized system for forums. We have stackexchange already, but that’s really designed to be a question and answer site.

              • poVoq
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                Discourse, NodeBB and Flarum are all currently working on ActivityPub federation support. The first two have some basic support already available.

                Edit: I read “decentralized”. The “centralized” system for forums is obviously Reddit.

        • Venia Silente
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          32 months ago

          I’m probably way out of the loop but from the perspective of devs getting to contribute, don’t stuff like Discourse ship with “login with your Github account” already? Or Google, or Facebook, or…

          Also, please, it’s 1 click nowadays to make your browser remember your logins for you, if it comes down to laziness

      • db0
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        2 months ago

        Ease, convenience, existing userbase, familiarity, choose a few

        • @Cataphract@lemmy.ml
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          72 months ago

          I guess we have different perspectives. Ease, convenience = forums, existing userbase? = Do you prefer Reddit for this reason?, familiarity = forums lol, search-ability = forums, privacy = forums, etc etc.

            • @Cataphract@lemmy.ml
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              122 months ago

              The discussion seems very muddled and opinionated ITT because I’m not even sure if you’re talking about a Discord Server or a forum/communication platform on a dedicated server. You might be able to slap together a Discord server faster, but the organizational power and not putting that extra work on users for Discord participation makes forum’s superior. Part of the project development is sysadmin. If it’s not, why take it FOSS at all? Discord is designed to take up your time, those pretty bots and “perks” keep you viewing. What could’ve been a well thought out message on a board with a reply now becomes 20+ texts which you’re stuck communicating on. Rinse and repeat every day, on a forum you simply link the previous conversation and you’re done.

              I think it’s a neutral wash atm, Discord may be packaged better to be mainstream but it’s bloat all around with lots of negatives. Anyone saying Discord is better is just preference at this point, lots of counterintuitive comments like we need “real-time” communication but also anything else takes up project development, like Discord is some kind of time saver.

                • @toastal@lemmy.ml
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                  32 months ago

                  Libera.chat & OFTC exist for this purpose to do chat for open source without needing to set up a service.

              • @pop@lemmy.ml
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                12 months ago

                please list all your personal foss projects and discussion forums you’ve set up for them please. I would like to join them all.

              • conciselyverbose
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                12 months ago

                Discord supports threaded topic based formats as well.

                The reality is that for a lot of interactions, a live chat feels better than a forum post. You can very easily do both on discord, though.

                It’s not perfect, but the alternatives that aren’t a whole project by themselves building a tool don’t have feature parity, or the user base.

          • db0
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            172 months ago

            Forums are not the same as real-time. And yes for most of the people using discord, forums wouldn’t cover the same niche.

            • poVoq
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              62 months ago

              Discourse has somewhat decent chat built in these days.

            • @Cataphract@lemmy.ml
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              32 months ago

              I think you might just be blinded by Discord for some reason. I’m not sure what “niche” you’re referring to with Discord that can’t be provided with forums (unless you’re worried about cosmetics I guess?). There are forums with real-time communications like chat, notifications, direct-messaging. I’m not trying to argue, getting your perspective is always helpful and might show something I’m missing, but your responses seem vague and not really a counter-point.

              • db0
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                -22 months ago

                My perspective is of a FOSS developer with multiple communities of thousands. If you can’t grasp it, that’s on you. It’s also why purity moralizing isn’t useful. I have only so much mental bandwidth to spend on organizing and self-hosting. If people are not stepping up to do the community management and infrastructure work, I will go with the past of least resistance.

                • @Cataphract@lemmy.ml
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                  82 months ago

                  If you can’t grasp it, that’s on you. It’s also why purity moralizing isn’t useful

                  oh ok, thanks for the clarification.

                  If people are not stepping up to do the community management and infrastructure work, I will go with the past of least resistance.

                  That’s basically it in a nut shell, path of least resistance. Doesn’t refute any claims made in the article or arguments presented here. Just a shame another company has a stranglehold on a whole category of services that have to be used to participate in society … while developing FOSS.

              • db0
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                2 months ago

                I’ve used matrix. I am still using matrix. Just not for anything with a significant community

                • @iopq@lemmy.world
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                  52 months ago

                  NixOS uses it, and it has the biggest repo out of any distro, so I’d consider it a significant community

                • Venia Silente
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                  32 months ago

                  Servers & clients use too many resources.

                  Didn’t XMPP solve that in, like, 1999?

                  (Really, what is with devs and nu-protocols these days? Back in my days you could run a webhost on a potato)

      • db0
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        182 months ago

        I’ve used matrix and spaces before. Nowhere close as convenient as a discord server. In fact I even had a matrix to discord bridge so I can get the best of both worlds until I had to hide all my matrix channels because of uncontrolled spam

        • @toastal@lemmy.ml
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          32 months ago

          Meanwhile the OCaml IRC chat gets spam from Discord Crypto bots due to bridging with that proprietary platform.

        • @iopq@lemmy.world
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          22 months ago

          Open source projects improve over time. Corporations improve being able to make money over time, eventually leading to enshittification.

          I know which one I’ll support

    • @xenoclast@lemmy.world
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      Took way too long to find a response from someone that actually does the work.

      Most of this discussion is just the neuro spicy and olds angry that everyone doesn’t do it the “right” way.

      I bet there are billions of hours wasted by people trying to make the perfect way to document and discuss stuff, while the answer is “it’s hard, tedious, and pretty manual work to create and manage good documentation”.

      But nobody wants to do it because it has and always will suck.

      I’m amused to know that I can look through old irc chats talking about how forums are the death of foss projects. Or mail lists complaining that everyone is using IRC wrong…

      • db0
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        32 months ago

        You’re not even worth responding seriously to.

        • @nintendiator@feddit.cl
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          -42 months ago

          We’re on the same page then, as someone who says to go around involved in “multiple large Foss services” (no evidence to that) but that demands to be given freeloading on infrastructure by everyone else because otherwise Discord, well, is not really worth responding seriously to either.

          • db0
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            Lol I don’t go around linking my credentials before I reply. Those who know, know. Those who don’t, check my profile, before insulting me,. And those who are useless to Foss , leave replies like yours.

        • @nintendiator@feddit.cl
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          -42 months ago

          I mean yeah I technically can’t offer the hosting without the authorization of my boss, but, ceteris paribus, how much are you offering?

          • db0
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            I wouldn’t even take you if you paid me.

  • Archon of the Valley
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    592 months ago

    Discord is only good for coordinating game events and helping to facilitate gaming community engagement. I’m so sick of everyone pushing it as the central hub of everything social and the idea of entire projects centered around Discord is absolutely ludicrous.

    • @maness300@lemmy.world
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      -62 months ago

      Why should different chat programs be used for different purposes?

      The whole idea is to… chat.

      I guess you’re the kind of guy who has multiple phones when 1 would work perfectly well.

      • @zalgotext@sh.itjust.works
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        282 months ago

        Yes, discord is for chatting, that’s correct. It’s not a tech support platform, nor is it a documentation repo, yet people commonly try to use it as such.

  • sparky@lemmy.federate.cc
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    562 months ago

    I miss regular old web forums, mailing lists and that sort of thing. Discord / Slack / etc have zero discoverability. The ability to google your question is gone, and knowledge is ephemeral, when a chat is the central source of community.

    • @CancerMancer@sh.itjust.works
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      82 months ago

      A few weeks ago the community manager of the Helldivers Discord got upset and deleted the whole thing. Years of discussions and knowledge (and memes) gone.

      Naturally you can’t even bring up the idea that a Discord community takes on a life past its “owner” once it reaches a certain size or level of activity. “Your container, your rules” say the defenders unironically, while not acknowledging that you neither own the “server” nor make all the rules.

    • billwashere
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      52 months ago

      Thank you!!! I feel the same way and I felt like I was losing my marbles.

      Discord is just way too ephemeral and the answers you get depend on who is logged on at the time. I don’t expect an immediate answer but I also don’t wanna wade through 14 conversations either.

    • hswolf
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      42 months ago

      yeah, discord do be like that

      on hindsight they are trying to implement a “forum” like experience, where you can create a dedicated threads channel where you csn search previous threads, but it’s not exactly like a real forum, pretty useful tho

            • smoothbrain coldtakes
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              422 months ago

              You don’t need to sign up for forums for them to be searched through.

              The point is that Discord is an information black hole. It’s all contained within the server, unindexed, private, hidden, and entirely gone if the server gets deleted.

              • @MigratingtoLemmy@lemmy.world
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                42 months ago

                You would need to sign up to be able to participate, which seems to be the pain point from the beginning. That was the reason why I suggested email threads akin to what Linus and Co use for Kernel development, since those can be searched no problem, whilst almost everyone has email IDs

                • @ThePerfectLink@lemmy.world
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                  I don’t think participation is the problem. If you think about it, you wouldn’t want just anyone to post something on a platform without first engaging in said platform. That can only have a neutral or negative effect. People asking stupid questions or people cursing out users. The act of signup ensures that the would-be poster has to signup first and rationalize their post during that process.

                  Therefor, the problem must be something else, it is the information gateoff (amongst other things) that makes Discord and similar apps unfavorable for community management and information distribution.

    • AlexisFR
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      212 months ago

      Because it’s a decent all in one platform and they don’t want to deal with the alternatives.

    • @linearchaos@lemmy.world
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      192 months ago

      The integrations and plugins, established workflows, support systems ticketing it’s all turnkey. I hate the platform and I wish people wouldn’t use it but I understand the draw.

        • @linearchaos@lemmy.world
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          42 months ago

          There are bots that tie in and store tickets several of my software vendors use them. When you have a problem you drop into a certain channel and make a request it issues you a ticket with a link creates a new channel that’s just a conversation between you and support. At first it seems clergy but after you use it a couple of times it’s reasonably slick

            • @linearchaos@lemmy.world
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              52 months ago

              A lot of people have discord, a lot less people have slack.

              Slack is also starting to charge for those workflows. My slack bill at work is gone up 50% past what it was. And I’m now getting monthly warnings from using my integrations. They would like me to put a credit card into handle more jira tickets.

              • @ResoluteCatnap@lemmy.ml
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                32 months ago

                You also need to pay to just have message history preserved on slack. Discord that information is there for free for as long as the server/discord exists.

                I’m not saying people should use discord, but people are using it because it’s free to use.

    • @andreas@lemmy.korfmann.xyz
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      92 months ago

      same goes for those that create self hostable, privacy oriented services and bake in dropbox and/or google drive support… like WUT.

      • Nik282000
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        Because most selfhosters are too lazy or inexperienced to break away from cloud services. Docker is great but it has also enables a “just run this docker” mentality that mirrors the Windows “just run this exe.”

        edit: I think that the opportunity to learn how a project works, how to debug problems and how to integrate a project into their own setup is obscured.

    • @Die4Ever@programming.dev
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      Because if I didn’t use Discord then I would be the only one in the community. Discord has a massive userbase especially with gamers. You give them a Discord link and there’s a decent chance you’ll see them join and post a message. Give them any other link and they’ll never make an account, they probably won’t even click the link to see it.

      I provide links for Discord, Lemmy, Kbin, Mastodon, Steam group, and GitHub. I see lots of people come in on Discord, but 0 on the others except for myself lol.

      Only the few actual contributors use the GitHub, don’t think I’ve ever seen a non-programmer submit a bug report on my GitHub or use the discussions or leave any comments on releases or anything.

      I’m also on Moddb and NexusMods, got a few comments on Moddb, none on Nexusmods yet.

      I also have Twitch and YouTube of course, I get small numbers of people commenting on those.

      Nobody has even asked for any other type of community, Discord is just want they want. If I just wanted to talk to myself then I wouldn’t bother creating a community/forum at all.

      • @MigratingtoLemmy@lemmy.world
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        32 months ago

        Essentially, Discord is convenient for them.

        TBH forums really are for the technical people, at least for the use cases I’m imagining. What incentive could we give that they join forums too?

    • @pop@lemmy.ml
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      -32 months ago

      Because most opensource enthusiasts cry foul on the internet, want everything open-source, free and privacy centric but never contribute anything of value.

      Did the author start a matrix instance yet? No?

      Yes, not much has changed.

      • 2xsaiko
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        92 months ago

        The author is the creator of sourcehut, literally a platform for collaborative open-source projects. I think he’s done a lot more useful than set up a new Matrix instance.

  • Venia Silente
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    342 months ago

    I get that people want a “simple way to chat” and Discord does that well, I guess. I mean, everyone’s talking about the forum aspect but what’s the alternative for chat? Mumble?

    Just, please, don’t hide documentation in the Discord. A neocities page costs literally $0. Please. Think of the poor SEO consultants!

    • Archon of the Valley
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      52 months ago

      I find that some Matrix clients make it easy to build and interact with a community. Even Element has a lot of Discord’s core features, it just lacks the streaming and some of the gaming-related stuff. Otherwise, Matrix rooms are sufficient for building an “easy to chat” community.

    • @xenoclast@lemmy.world
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      52 months ago

      Yeah I’m indifferent to discord as a platform. It’ll eventually be enshitified and people will move on.

      The bummer is that it’s enabling people to be poor at documentation in a whole new way.

      That said, if Discord went away tomorrow most software projects would still have garbage documentation, because most software projects are ephemeral at BEST.

  • Brayd
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    262 months ago

    I love Immich and Sharkey but both use Discord. Sharkey even used Matrix in the beginning but eventually switched to Discord. I think their reasoning was that they were often attacked by trolls etc. and that Matrix didn’t had good options for moderation etc.

    And while I love Matrix I fully agree. Yes there are moderation bots like Draupnir and they’re good but you will need to self host them and register a user for them and and and. It’s not as easy as with Discord or even Telegram bots. Also there are many Discord bots providing very fun elements like levels, reputations, roles etc. which simply do not exist or aren’t even possible in Matrix as it currently is.

    On top of that we have the decentralization “problem” for end users who aren’t technical. They simply don’t care much about privacy and they don’t care if Discord stores every single message and picture in clear text forever on their servers. It’s easier to create a Discord account on a centralized platform than understanding Matrix understanding which server to choose, understanding which client to choose and understanding how encryption, key management etc. works. Yes decentralization is important and great but for the average user it’s still something that they do not really know which “overcomplicates” it for them.

    And another point is that Matrix spaces are simply not the same as Discord servers. Channels are not as easy to manage because they are rooms on their own in Matrix and a space is not a server but rather a way to organize multiple rooms. Not every client supports spaces yet. Clients implement them differently. Then there’s Element and Element X on phones confusing people new to Matrix etc. In Discord several channels can be grouped in another category. In Matrix you’d use Subspaces for that giving you the same issue as with normal spaces.

    And most clients don’t implement simple things on mobile like…sending multiple images at once. From the perspective of an end user that fact annoys the heck out of anyone wanting to send several pictures.

    So yeah I think it’s a mixture out of those things.

    Matrix especially needs better bot support with bots that could be used by everyone as it is with Discord instead of being only usable by server admins or the bots creators as it is with many Matrix bots. And it does need a better solution for spaces with rooms or another thing in the specs that replicates how Discord servers work so that it’s a “space” with actual “subchannels” without every space technically being it’s own room dangling around in limbo and just being “sorted” into the space.

    And it needs better moderation tools.

      • poVoq
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        The elephant in the room is IRC. Which continues to work fine and hosts huge FOSS communities. Self hosting it is even better as you can use a more modern version like ergo.chat than the large networks sadly utilize.

        • @Blaze@lemmy.zip
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          32 months ago

          You made me look again at IRC V3, seems like they support threads and emoji reactions. I might give it a try

        • @toastal@lemmy.ml
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          22 months ago

          IRCv3 has a lot of features & is good, but if you need encrypted chat and/or want to support decentralization XMPP MUCs can fit the bill similar being just a bit less lightweight.

        • Brayd
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          12 months ago

          But IRC doesn’t really support E2EE in 1:1 chats right? Because that’s something very important for me. I don’t want to use an app only for public channels I ideally would like to use it for everything. Including messaging the people I know.

          • poVoq
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            12 months ago

            There are some ways to make it work with OTR, but realistically speaking no.

            Personally I get around that by using XMPP and connecting to IRC via the excellent Biboumi gateway. Thus I get the best of both, as XMPP is working really well for e2ee 1:1 chats.

        • fmstrat
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          12 months ago

          I use IRC in Matrix, and have used IRC since the 90s, but IRC lacks many modern features, even simple things like configurable push notifications and universal encryption, perhaps ergo is better? But then again, the reason I chose Lemmy was distribution, so…

          • poVoq
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            32 months ago

            Heh, push notifications and universal encryption are about the opposite of simple and fail to work on Matrix most of the time. Most of the actually simple and useful features for a public chat are supported by Ergo though.

            • fmstrat
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              12 months ago

              What issues have you had? Using Element worked out of the box for me on both. Even spun up my own server with a docker compose and it worked fine there, too.

              • poVoq
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                12 months ago

                Large public rooms have constant issues with encryption, and since you can’t turn it off once enabled (yeah 🤦‍♂️) most public rooms are not e2ee. Besides the fact that e2ee doesn’t really make sense in public rooms as anyone can join.

                Push notifications in Matrix clients only work with the help of Google’s or Apple’s centralized infrastructure. This is of course only partially the fault of Matrix, but XMPP for example can do it without pretty well.

    • KᑌᔕᕼIᗩ
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      12 months ago

      Matrix sucks, that’s why most people won’t use it. I’m already giving my software away for free and providing free support for it, why would I want to take up even more of my free time running and maintaining a Matrix server as well?

      Sure, I could use an already available Matrix server but I already have a Discord account, all my friends and contributors do as well and the entire thing is easy to set up and use, plus I’m already running the Discord client too.

      On top of this, the argument about searchability is irrelevant. Projects have been giving support via IRC forever which has all the same problems. The best thing to do for any non-trivial support inquiries is to direct the user to lodge a support ticket and always has been.

      Matrix just isn’t a compelling option, even if it had feature parity with Discord and was easier to use, it doesn’t have any real inertia anyway.

      • fmstrat
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        32 months ago

        From the article.

        Free software matters — that’s why you’re writing it, after all. Using Discord partitions your community on either side of a walled garden, with one side that’s willing to use the proprietary Discord client, and one side that isn’t. It sets up users who are passionate about free software — i.e. your most passionate contributors or potential contributors — as second-class citizens.

        Maybe you’ll take up more of your time answering lazy user’s questions than speaking with those that are helpful with solving issues.

        Your argument about time is more in favor of Matrix, and even more so in favor of just using your code hosting’s issue tracker.

        • KᑌᔕᕼIᗩ
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          2 months ago

          The article is wrong, you disrespect your users by forcing them to use a platform that they otherwise wouldn’t just to engage with you. Github isn’t free either, but the majority of us use it for free software too.

      • chebra
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        22 months ago

        @Kushia @brayd

        installing a matrix client and creating a matrix account is exactly as complicated as installing discord app and creating an account there.

        • KᑌᔕᕼIᗩ
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          It could install itself and I still wouldn’t use it. Nobody I care about is on there and inertia is important too. This has been true since the dawn of real-time communications platforms and isn’t going to change either.

          • chebra
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            82 months ago

            @Kushia 🤷‍♂️ I have the opposite situation, nobody I care about is on discord. So discord sucks? See the thing is if one matrix guy wants to talk to one discord guy, one of them needs to install a new app. And I think the world would be better if we all had more free/libre apps and less walled gardens, so I will strongly resist installing discord. Just yet another proprietary walled garden waiting for the rug-pull. Why? Just convince the other guy to use Matrix and over time our world will improve

            • KᑌᔕᕼIᗩ
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              2 months ago

              The you’re free to use it, that’s the great thing about choice.

              • chebra
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                32 months ago

                @Kushia Of course I am. Now I would appreciate if you didn’t come to the open-source community telling everyone how bad they are and that they are never gonna make it. That’s a pretty shit move man. Cheers.

                • KᑌᔕᕼIᗩ
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                  12 months ago

                  I never said it’s never going to make it, I said I care about what works for the majority with the least amount of friction.

                  If you took that as a personal attack that’s on you.

    • haui
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      -42 months ago

      Matrix has great bots (moderation and otherwise). You just need to make your own matrix server or join one that has this stuff enabled. Developers arent „users“ they’re tech and they should absolutely be able to configure mod bots and such.

      I get that matrix isnt as easy as discord and it never will be/should be. Corpo Media is an ad machine to make money. Thats why they‘re so streamlined. You can join matrix.org today and discuss with thousands of folks in many communities.

      Feel like making your own? Then do it. It’s becoming easier day by day to host your own.

      • @sweng@programming.dev
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        62 months ago

        There is a big difference between “is unable to maintain bots due to lack of skills” and “is unable to maintain bots due to lack of time and motivation”.

        • haui
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          22 months ago

          There is a big difference between maintain and download a docker-compose.yml and typing docker compose up -d

          • @sweng@programming.dev
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            22 months ago

            What about security updates? What about monitoring? What about the underlying infrastructure? What about even picking what software to use and configuring it?

            I haven’t heard of docker compose up guess-what-i-want-and-just-do-it yet, but I guess there is some LLM that can hallucinate one for you.

            • haui
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              22 months ago

              Obviously, having discord gobble up your data is more comfortable in any case. Still, its not that hard, especially for a tool as popular as matrix. I‘m not saying its no work, I‘m saying its not much.

          • fmstrat
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            02 months ago

            Don’t fret, it’s people with your mindset that will survive the impending AI tech employment apocalypse.

      • Brayd
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        12 months ago

        Ideally “users” wouldn’t only be IT guys but also an average person. Some of my friends use Matrix to message me. They certainly are no developers or have technical IT knowledge. They certainly don’t know how to set up a bot. With discord you just add a bot to your server (equivalent to a Matrix Space) and there you go. That’s user friendly. Matrix bots work yes. But they are by far not user friendly.

        • haui
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          02 months ago

          We‘re talking about wildly different things here.

          • A „user“ is not the person making a server (discord or matrix for that matter)
          • A developer (which are the people making FOSS projects, which were the topic) is absolutely a tech person
          • A matrix bot can just be invited to your space
          • Hosting your own bot is downloading a script, changing some values and starting it
          • Matrix is a couple years old and written by hobbyists, discord is a for profit product with dark patterns to suck people into paying for basic features

          Please dont use these ignorant arguments, its obvious that matrix is the better choice if someone can afford the time to get to know it or just joins a server.

  • @verdigris@lemmy.ml
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    252 months ago

    Devs ITT biting every single argument in the article and then saying “but it’s easy” is extremely ironic

  • @pixelscript@lemmy.ml
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    I don’t mind Discord being a centralized platform for open source project discussion, if and only if the only roles it serves specifically play to its one strength, which is real time discussion. Asking for live support (from the dev if they are there, or the community if they are not) and doing live bug triage are the two big use cases.

    Should contact for these things be real time? Maybe, maybe not. Async discussion like you get on forums or via email can do the job. But if you value real-time chat, Discord does it well.

    Everything else? Do it elsewhere. Do not make Discord your only bug tracker. Do not make it your only wiki. Do not make it your only source of documentation. Do not make it the only place you broadcast updates or announcements. Do not make it your only distribution platform for critical downloads. And for the love of god please do not make it the only way to contact you. I don’t care if you allow Discord to additionally do these things using integrations, that’s fine, just stop trying to contort Discord into your only way of doing these.

    Is Discord the only capable option for real time chat? No. But it has several things going in its favor, namely how one can reasonably expect a good sum of their target user base is already using it independently for other purposes, in addition to its numerous QoL features.

    It can also better integrate into the dev’s personal routine if they already use it independently. Like, do I have an email address? Yeah. Do I read my email on any reasonable interval? Hell no. My email inbox is little more than a dustbin for registration confirmations and online order receipts. I’ve had email for decades and I think I can count the number of non-work, non-business conversations I’ve held over it in that whole span of time on one hand. Meanwhile, I’m terminally online on Discord. So if I’m gonna be a small independent FOSS project developer, am I gonna want to interface with everyone over email? No. I’ll still make it an option, because being only contactable on Discord is cringe, but it will not be fast. Discord will be my preferred channel.

    Should I put more effort into being contactable on other platforms, because it’s the right thing to do? Meh. I have no duty of stewardship to be available on platforms available to anyone in particular. I maintain this hypothetical project for free, on my own time, of my own volition, and I provide it to you entirely warranty-free. I have the courtesy to make all static resources available in sensible public places, and I provide email as a slow, async way to reach me. But if you want to converse with me directly in real time, you can come to me where I’m hanging out.

      • @pixelscript@lemmy.ml
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        You’d certainly think so. But never underestimate a user’s ability to jury-rig a piece of software into doing something it wasn’t designed to do, ignoring any and all obviously better solutions as they do so.

        I don’t think I’ve ever actually seen documentation published on Discord and nowhere else. But I do very often see no documentation whatsoever except a “just ask around on the Discord” link serving the role.

        Discord probably isn’t used as a robust ticketing system either; usually if anything it’s a bot that will push all tickets to an actual GitWhatever issue, which is fine. But again, what I do see often is projects with no ticketing system whatsoever, and a Discord link to just dump your problems at. If the issue tracker on the repo isn’t outright disabled, it’s a ghost town of open issues falling on deaf ears.

        Announcements can be pretty bad. Devs can get into a habit of thinking the only people who care about periodic updates are already in the Discord server, so they don’t update READMEs, wikis, or docs on the repo as often as they should, allowing them to go out of date.

        Fwiw I’ve also seen several projects that have Discord servers with none of these problems, because they handle all those other parts properly.

        • Yes, but its important that there is information available to maintainers about the pros/cons of mechanisms available, so that they are able to make informed choices about the platforms that they use and influence others to use. Hence the article.

      • @pixelscript@lemmy.ml
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        02 months ago

        Indeed, it is my choice. And as of now, even in light of all of this article’s information, I have chosen Discord. For now.

        Deal breaking flaws to others are not necessarily deal breaking flaws to me. If their differences in principles prevent them from reaching me on my preferred platform, tough noogies for them.

  • @coffeeClean@infosec.pub
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    from the article:

    In short, using Discord for your free software/open source (FOSS) software project is a very bad idea. Free software matters — that’s why you’re writing it, after all. Using Discord partitions your community on either side of a walled garden, with one side that’s willing to use the proprietary Discord client, and one side that isn’t. It sets up users who are passionate about free software — i.e. your most passionate contributors or potential contributors — as second-class citizens.

    Interesting to do a “s/Discord/Github/” replace on the above. Same situation yet hardly anyone gives a shit.

    So yes, Drew DeVault is right. But he overestimates people’s commitment to free world digital rights principles and consistency thereof.

  • @merthyr1831@lemmy.world
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    If you’re desperate for a discord-like experience (because lets face it, irc and mailing lists arent very flashy anymore!) you can try:

    • rocket chat - General purpose chat platform, very similar discord
    • mattermost - developer-centric platform, similar to slack
    • Matrix - open protocol, has a bunch of desktop clients

    Yes you wont have voice/vodeo chat for these but IMO that’s rarely useful anyway. And if you DO need it then you can use stuff like teamspeak or zoom***

    ***yes i know the issues with these options but for devs you dont really ever need to use meetings for very long and sometimes using a shitty free service with all you need is better than self hosting your own. Maybe Nextcloud talk can work?

    Some good arguments made for FOSS voice/meeting apps, and why VC and meetings are more important to the FOSS workflow than I thought :)

    • Mike
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      2 months ago

      Jitsi Meet for zoom replacement

      • @MonkeMischief@lemmy.today
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        42 months ago

        Jitsi is amazing. Even during 2020 it always has worked way better than Zoom for me, and I haven’t even tried hosting it myself.

      • @MrMcGasion@lemmy.world
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        32 months ago

        I think that’s actually what discord should be used for. It’s one of the better platforms for voice/video/text chat. It’s mostly just when people use discord for what should be a public forum or wiki that it becomes a problem.

        And sure, it’s not a great place for open source developers to do all their communication in, because being able to reference things in the future if a project lead closes the server is important. But it’s probably fine for coding sprints and meetings here and there as long as someone is taking notes to be documented elsewhere. Discord is arguably better than zoom for that use case.

    • @maness300@lemmy.world
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      -42 months ago

      Stop recommending closed-source, paid solutions. It makes you look like a shill.

      Matrix is the only suitable replacement for discord, as it is the only federated replacement.

      • Sybil
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        52 months ago

        irc and xmpp federate…xmpp is highly extensible.

      • @TCB13@lemmy.world
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        32 months ago

        Matrix is the only suitable replacement for discord, as it is the only federated replacement.

        No, stop recommending questionable open-source. Matrix is a metadata disaster and XMPP is the true and the OG federated and truly open solution that is very extensible.

        • @SuperSynthia@lemmy.world
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          12 months ago

          Can you explain xmpp? I’d like a federated discord replacement buddy if you could show me the way I’d greatly appreciate it :)

          • @TCB13@lemmy.world
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            XMPP is like email, a very open standard that was designed for interoperability even with more closed servers that included proprietary features and extensions. You can message anyone by email no matter what’s or where’s their server and can be configured to be secure and private. Here a quick overview of the architecture.

            XMPP is the only solution that treats messaging and video like email: just provide an address and the servers and clients will cooperate with each other in order to maintain a conversation. Everything else is just an attempt at yet another vendor lock-in.

      • @toastal@lemmy.ml
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        12 months ago

        Matrix was built by Israeli intelligence & consumes so many resources that it’s not feasible to self-host on most budgets. As such it’s highly centralized & the community is still largely being ran by Matrix.org as the keeper of the implementation server, the most popular client, the specification, the largest server- which syncs back the metadata.

        Mattermost is by-design centralized but it’s self-hostable & AGPL so I’m not sure where the closed-source accusation is coming from. At least it’s less wasteful than trying to be decentralized & if you wanted lightweight decentralization, you would reach for XMPP.

        • @smileyhead@discuss.tchncs.de
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          32 months ago

          Matrix was built by Israeli intelligence

          It get some resources from them at the start, but they do not fund it for a long time.

          consumes so many resources that it’s not feasible to self-host on most budgets

          When you join large rooms like #matrix:matrix.org, it consumes a lot of space. But otherwise it is not that heavy. I hope they fix this, as this can be fixed with better resource planning, the biggest tables on the database are those like state_groups_state that does not hold bare information and just group information together for quick search. (I hosted a server and MatrixHQ room took 100GB…, 95% of the database).

          As such it’s highly centralized

          Looking at server list it seems very healthy. Also (opinion alert) I think having thousands of public server running by a randoms like there is for big chunk of Fediverse will not be as healthy as dozens of well funded community servers.

          the community is still largely being ran by Matrix.org as the keeper of the implementation server

          Synapse is not the reference server, there is no one official implementation for a purpose. And old news, it is now hosted by Element under AGPL.

          • @toastal@lemmy.ml
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            -12 months ago

            They could still be funding it in other ways. It’s a conspiracy, but one that would make some sense.

            I gather you are saying there still are real storage issues. The bigger your server grows the more wildly this can get out of hand once just one of your users joins a big room. The whole model is about distributing the syncing of messages & no matter how they slice it to speed parts of it up, I feel it will remain an issue by design unlike other protocols that treat realtime chat as ephemeral & just give you enough history to get context of the current conversation. I’ve already witnessed 3 servers try to grow a following, then when users came, the bill inevitable shut them down–in the same way that Mastodon can skyrocket bills due to fundamental designs. Other protocols also handle decentralization better in ways that don’t require massive funding & empower users to host their own decentralized server–to which I think is healthy & desirable.

            Synapse more or less acts as a reference server in the way that all Twitter-likes are basically required to be Mastodon-compatible.

        • poVoq
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          12 months ago

          Mattermost is by-design centralized but it’s self-hostable & AGPL so I’m not sure where the closed-source accusation is coming from.

          The AGPL community edition of Mattermost lacks several crucial features for anything but very small private communities. It isn’t closed source per se, but very much open-core.

          • @toastal@lemmy.ml
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            I didn’t say it was good or perfect :P …I’ve also never administered it, but I know those that do self-host it. Open core isn’t the worst. Self-hosted GitLab’s aren’t my favorite, but I certainly prefer it to the Microsoft-owned alternative (that includes have to create an account too! *shock*).

            • @ikidd@lemmy.world
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              32 months ago

              Thanks for the interesting rabbithole.

              Well, that’s something I didn’t know, but it seems like they’ve been in the process of removing or giving the ability to remove the parts that communicate back to the main Matrix coordinators since 2019. And it’s been 2017 since they had funding from Amdocs. I’d certainly listen if someone says they’ve recently analyzed that sort of data going back to the organizations servers. It doesn’t look like it though.

              At this point, the fact that it’s all opensource and the self-hosting options/configurations let you keep things internal now would make the point of its origin moot. TOR is another example of something that may have suspicious origins but because it’s public and OS, most people trust the privacy of its implementation.

              • @toastal@lemmy.ml
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                12 months ago

                There are ways do funding while being in the shadows. It’s absolutely conspiracy, but something I can see being of importance to spy agencies as Matrix is defacto centralized with all metadata & assets syncing back to the mothership. Signal also had their server code closed for a while, & I wouldn’t be surprised if something regarding US intelligence wasn‘t involved. I think you can trust these platforms more than most, but I’d prefer keeping an arm’s length until we are years removed & see open governance (something Matrix is slowly (finally) transitioning too, but other chat protocols have done for much longer).

                • @ikidd@lemmy.world
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                  32 months ago

                  Yah, I have my doubts about Signal as well, given the insistence, even now that the username function has been added, of needing a phone number to register. That doesn’t seem to fit with an application that’s supposed purpose is to be a private communications network and has been promoted for political change purposes in developing countries.