minim

joined 1 year ago
[–] minim@lemmy.world 5 points 3 days ago

A shower thought with a long history:

Herostratus (Ancient Greek: Ἡρόστρατος) was a 4th-century BC Greek, accused of seeking notoriety as an arsonist by destroying the second Temple of Artemis in Ephesus (on the outskirts of present-day Selçuk), one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World. The act prompted his execution and the creation of a damnatio memoriae law forbidding anyone to mention his name, orally or in writing. The law was ultimately ineffective, as evidenced by surviving accounts of his crime. Thus, Herostratus has become an eponym for someone who commits a criminal act in order to become famous.

[–] minim@lemmy.world 2 points 1 month ago

You're probably taking issue with the post title ("birth of multimedia"), but I want to call out that the article itself only claims that Windows 95 "marked the beginning of the PC multimedia revolution."

[–] minim@lemmy.world 16 points 1 year ago (2 children)

You can make a non-dead version of the community on another instance!

[–] minim@lemmy.world 3 points 1 year ago

I mean, is McDonald’s decentralized? Their French fries are replicated in stores that are geographically distributed so their users can go get them with relatively low latency.

[–] minim@lemmy.world 3 points 1 year ago

Completely agree—even if it tends toward centralization, federation seems like a big improvement.

I’m just thinking the degree of improvement may meaningfully depend on where things end up on the centralized-decentralized spectrum.

[–] minim@lemmy.world 6 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Was there any tendency towards centralization of subreddits?

That seems like a different dynamic to me. Subreddits have a divergent tendency because people have different interests, tastes, etc.

But new communities can all be created all on the same big Lemmy instance, each on its own instance, or anything in between.

To take the extreme example of one community per instance—I don’t think we’ll see that because spinning up and maintaining a new instance would be an incredibly high cost (time, if not money) just for someone to start a new community.

Even in an in-between state where there are dozens or hundreds of non-trivial instances, someone deciding to start a community would be incentivized to do so in the most popular instance (or one of the most popular ones) because the community would be visible to more people more quickly (since non-local instances have to discover it first).

But to your point, this depends on how much of an advantage it is for a new community to be instance-local. In my (very limited) experience with Lemmy so far, there’s a definite difference in ease of finding/subscribing locally vs on another instance.

Maybe this can be addressed in time. And that’s kind of the reason for my post—I think it’s worth thinking about what dynamics might bias things toward or against centralization, and trying to keep the balance tilted toward decentralization.

 

In particular, it seems to me that centralization is almost a law of the universe (or at least a tendency). Lemmy may start decentralized, with dozens or hundreds of meaningfully-sized instances, but it’s easy to imagine a not-far future where most everyone has settled on just a handful of instances (or even just one).

I don’t mean to just be a pessimist here. I’m sure I’m far from the first person to wonder about this, and I’m curious whether there are ideas of how to counterbalance the tendency toward centralization.