I’m beginning to see that in order for lemmy to be truly federated, users must also become federated
I’m beginning to see that in order for lemmy to be truly federated, users must also become federated
It’s much more normal for a person to have many more subs attached to a single account than it is to have many accounts
E.g. you might have say 3 accounts, but one of those accounts might have 100 subs, relatively speaking the numbers aren’t comparable
That’s all well and good, but a user can be subscribed to many subs
This is a real shame, and highlights to me that the federation model might be wrong. If I want to access these subs now, I have to create a new account and I wish I didn’t have to. I wonder if the federated part should be user federation rather than instance federation?
something something blockchain?
I don’t know if it’s intentional or not, but you’re describing cyclical groups
How do I as a developer:
I’m an SRE by trade and would be happy to contribute my time in some way
I’m interested to know why more people aren’t recommending kopia, it seemed like the obvious choice when I evaluated them but perhaps I was just wrong?
Why is that?
I’m not super familiar with torrenting protocols, but would have naively assumed that the very fact that subs have a single source of truth (e.g. selfhosted@lemmy.world is hosted on lemmy.world in its entirety, and then only cached on other lemmy instances) would be enough?
I guess we’d need to federate the sub list, we wouldn’t want a central source of truth for that, but that bit isn’t any different to what we have currently AFAIK
Are you keeping the kernel updated? I’ve got a helios64 too but I’m stuck on kernel 5.10
No, you’ve completely missed what I said
I didn’t make a comment against lemmy.world, it was a comment against lemmy the application’s current data model for users