We still federate, but god knows how long that will last. They have defederated nearly 400 instances and they sound lile theyre losing the plot

  • dad
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    2 years ago

    This feels like a bad idea. Let’s look at some popular federated networks:

    1. Anyone with a phone number can call anyone else with a phone number.
    2. Anyone with an email can email anyone else with an email.
    3. Anyone can setup a Matrix server and message anyone else with federation turned on.
    4. There is one DNS system despite it being decentralised.

    This feels like a modern day IRC netsplit and we will all lose. This decision needs to be reversed once better tooling / organisation is put in place. Blocking should be done at a different layer (e.g. call blocking or email spam filtering).

    • mark
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      2 years ago

      But it is absolutely true that telephone networks and email servers that get used too much for spam calls/messages will get blacklisted by other providers.

      If your email provider gets a bad reputation then your emails will get blocked (that is a lot of how spam filtering works). That is pretty analogous.

      • dad
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        2 years ago

        This is different because it bifurcates the network. End users will have to understand which Lemmy providers federate with whichever others in a way they don’t have to with email today. It also feels like the bar to classifying these two providers as malicious is a lot lower than with email.

      • Mane25
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        2 years ago

        The difference is you’d usually get some sort of error message if your phone call doesn’t go through, or your email bounces.

        What’s really needed is some sort of warning symbol meaning “this person can’t read your comments”.