this post was submitted on 20 Jun 2023
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I'm a DevOps/SysOps/SecOps engineer - have been for over a decade now. Even if I CAN do all the things listed, it takes time to do it. It takes time to configure your networking layer, especially when documentation of the underlying app is in flux and never 100% correct. It takes time to secure your server, especially when the "prod" configuration in the repo isn't really that secure at all.
Folks saying to just "code it myself" - sure, let me stop doing my day job and start planning on this completely unpaid enhancement. Let me tell my wife - "Sorry babe, gotta prove this internet person wrong and it must be today - can't go to board game night with you". I mean, I'll actually likely end up coding it myself, but when I can. Not when the trolls who say "Oh, come on, it'll be EZ" - yeah, I know better than that.
Folks just say to "Use other solutions" - Great! I already budgeted 150/month of my own money. Oh wait, that doesn't matter much when I have to worry about instances that can't spend that type of scratch.
The 2 Lemmy devs have funding. About 1500 total from community support, with the rest coming from a sponsorship/incubator type deal. A deal which pays out when targets/goals are achieved.
Which made me laugh at this:
Which is entirely what you are asking the Lemmy devs to do.
Thanks for raising awareness of the spam-bot-account issue.
Well I am making a distinction between creating a newer implementation and rolling back to an older, known implementation. It's why I find it bizarre when folks point out that there's a new feature request and a PR is guarenteed accepted - yes, but that will take more time than reverting some commits and maybe retrofitting if needed. The entire point I was trying to make is that they could just roll back, and when the new feature is ready, we can go right to it. I'm not (at least intentionally) asking for grandiose work and assuming going back is quicker and more readily available than waiting for a new solution to be implemented.
In the same article where they provided that 1500 number, the developers said they currently do not receive sponsorship money, as they are delaying those targets in order to improve stability and robustness.
Update: It looks like that number is about double now, about 3000 accross their three donation platforms.