We're the creators of Lemmy, Ask Us Anything. Starts Monday, 7 Aug, 1500 CEST
This is an opportunity for any users, server admins, or interested third parties to ask anything they'd like to @nutomic@lemmy.ml and I about Lemmy. This includes its development and future, as well as wider issues relevant to the social media landscape today.
Note: This will be the thread tmrw, so you can use this thread to ask and vote on questions beforehand.
Why are Lemmy devs so adamantly opposed to a Follow User feature?
This is the one feature that is the biggest hurdle for full federation between Lemmy and all the other fediverse instances. Mastodon (and its forks), Peertube, Pixelfed, and kbin all allow this and federate extremely well together while Lemmy is the worst at federating because its the only one to exclude this feature.
(Please don’t reply with “use kbin if you want to follow users” again as its very dismissive and frustrating)
Here’s my crude write up on a somewhat hacky way this can be implemented as is:
They probably wont implement due to potential harrassment from abuse. But you can follow users using Open RSS feeds in meantime. Here's your feed for example:
How would this open you up to abuse? Having a community with the same name as your username auto created where only you can post new threads wouldn’t open you up to abuse. But it would greatly benefit interoperability throughout the fediverse. Lemmy is currently the least interoperable fediverse software while also being the second most used. I also think its the most valuable since up/down voting and threaded replies makes the most valuable information the easiest to come by and follow. So it would be great for the best fediverse software to also be better at playing nice with the rest of the fediverse
I'm not against adding user-following, in fact I'd envisioned that we'd eventually add it way down the road. It'd just be a ton of work, and I have a backlog thats years-long, so its not anything I'll be taking on anytime soon.
And lemmy is primarily a link-aggregator first, with a focus on following communities, rather than a micro-blogging platform with a focus on following people.