- 2 Posts
- 7 Comments
nitroemdash@lemmy.wtfto
Fediverse@lemmy.world•Is there a federated fandom wiki alternative?English
3·11 days agoMirahaze doesn’t have ads
nitroemdash@lemmy.wtfOPto
Gaming@beehaw.org•Number of hours you need to work to buy GTA VI around the world
3·12 days agoThat’s median.
I don’t know what you’re referring to. Copy-pasting content instead of linking directly to the source is frowned on for numerous reasons.
Pasting a link is even easier than pasting text.
Sure, that’s a secondary and perfectly valid use. The OP of this thread posted an image promoting memes. That is what I criticized.
So, no more memes on /c/[email protected]?
Calling articles “lazy content” is extremely unintelligent. I’m disgusted that you should say that.
Reposts, not articles themselves. Reposting someone else’s writings from the web as a link is objectively low-effort work that could be handled by a dozen-line script.
Reddit and Lemmy are link/news aggregators.
Maybe they started as such, but now it’s a small part of their scope. I don’t perceive them as such, rather as a general-purpose forum. I go to Lemmy/Reddit to ask a question (e.g. how to repair a thing), voice an opinion, start a debate, talk about stuff, read comics, etc. I don’t recall following a single community that is about link aggregation.
So you hate original content lemmyers put effort into (discussion posts, memes, photos) and praise the laziest form of content (reposting articles someone on another platform made)? Do you want lemmy to become a parasitic platform depending on content from elsewhere to sustain itself?
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Most social media are commercial, privately owned, proprietary, centralised, and hence prone to enshittification. If a company will start to make anti-consumer moves to increase profit, most people will be too locked-in and invested to care to switch. Fediverse is a collection of independent instances in one decentralised network, constantly competing with each other with no full monopoly possible, and working under an open and forkable protocol.