fediverse

This magazine is from a federated server and may be incomplete. Browse more on the original instance.

narF, in What is Kbin - Join the Fediverse
@narF@kbin.social avatar

I just joined Kbin. How is the name supposed to be pronounced? Like cabin?

ernest,
@ernest@kbin.social avatar

Hi, good to see you here :) I honestly have no idea what the pronunciation is. It's a reference to the Linux /sbin, a container for things that are important to you. This is intentional, I want /kbin to be perceived as each individual instance. Each instance is different. Each community is different. That's what's cool about the Fediverse.

JungleGeorge,
@JungleGeorge@kbin.social avatar

I just like the fact that it sounds like a piece of KDE software 😅😅😅

TheArstaInventor,
@TheArstaInventor@kbin.social avatar

I do "K" "Bin", and then read it together. That's how I've been pronouncing it and imagined others were doing the same?

narF, in What is Kbin - Join the Fediverse
@narF@kbin.social avatar

Is there a way to see the list of groups (not sure what the name is... The things that are like "sub-reddits" lol)

sexy_peach,
@sexy_peach@feddit.de avatar
narF,
@narF@kbin.social avatar

Ah, they're called "magazines", i see.
But that list seems pretty baren. Does it show groups/magazines from other instances or only the Local ones? Does it shows groups/magazines from Lemmy?

sexy_peach,
@sexy_peach@feddit.de avatar

I don’t know :(

BrooklynMan, in These are the 7 most hated brands in America—Elon Musk's Twitter is No. 4
@BrooklynMan@beehaw.org avatar

the list, for the lazy:

  1. The Trump Organization
  2. FTX
  3. Fox Corporation
  4. Twitter
  5. Meta
  6. Spirit Airlines
  7. TikTok

and that hate is well-earned by each and every one of these companies

Dornad, in Am I doing this right?

I'm new too and also have a Mastodon account, just tried my first post on Mastodon and was able to see it here, just be aware that mastodon post shows under microblog.

Haven't tested the other way posting here and checking on mastodon but I guess if you post as a micro blog it will show but something under magazines maybe not.

Also want to mention that at first it did not show up (granted was just a few seconds, a minute at most) but I search my mastodon account here in kbin and it showed there and after that it showed on microblog, I guess with the search a kind of forced the sync between kbin and mastodon.

danchez1,

How did you connect there accounts. I've got them, just don't know what you do with them.

Dornad,

I did not "connect" them just made each account follow the other

For example in your case got to your mastodon account and search your kbin account "@danchez1" and click the follow button there.

And same here in kbin search for your full mastodon account and click on follow here and you are done each account will see the post of the other one.

Totendax, in Realistically how does the fediverse make money and remain sustainable? only donations?

I asked myself the same question, as even reddit is struggeling to be profitable.

Kata1yst,
@Kata1yst@kbin.social avatar

Realistically, the problem from the get go with Reddit is that it's a company. They have staff, they have managers/directors/c-levels for their staff, they have marketing, they have HR, they have a board, etc etc etc.

These costs quickly dwarf even hefty infrastructure.

Any "company" that builds a product will inevitably follow this trend. You either find a way to milk your customers for all their worth, or you fold. Venture Capitol and lenders eventually lose their patience.

Fediverse is different because it's a passion project by a handful of programmers and sysadmins that are volunteering their time and in many cases money. The overhead is basically nil, the only real costs are time (which people are voluntary donating) and hardware.

HarkMahlberg, in While trying to wrap my head around the concept of the Fediverse, I made this map. How did I do?
@HarkMahlberg@kbin.social avatar

I'm more of a visual learner and none of the explanations of the Fediverse included a detailed map of all the different entities involved. By all means, please make corrections, I'm sure there is at least one misunderstanding in there somewhere. Also not sure how Mastodon fits in, seems like the format would be incompatible with kbin and/or Lemmy. Thanks.

speck,

The part I'm getting tripped up revolves around accessing the content in another part of the fediverse. e.g., if I go to a lemmy instnace, it will ask for a log-in specfic to it (i.e. it doesn't recognize my kbin log-in). So what's the mechanism by which travel between platforms happens? If I understood correctly, some stuff will show up here that's been 'retweeted'. But what if I'm searching for content that lives in Lemmy or Mastodon instances?

Am I sort of making sense?

WorriedGnome,
@WorriedGnome@kbin.social avatar

You are making sense, just remember your login does not travel between kbin and lemmy. When you are on kbin, you can search for communities on the server you joined or across the fediverse. The way to do that is [email protected]

For example, say if I found out the beehaw.org server had an awesome gaming community, well I can just type [email protected] into the search box and then subscribe to it. It will then federated into the server (the server will start pulling in new posts - but not old posts) that means others can now see it too. That's why if you see the message that it's not fully federated and you might see more on the original instance.

Your login is just a place to reside but with the fediverse, you can pull in content to view. Which helps as you don't need multiple log ins for multiple services. I've seen a few people ask about people with the same username as theirs on other instances and that will happen but remember that your username is like email. You have [email protected], so whilst someone might share the same username, they'll never be on the same instance. That's how you tell others apart.

Hopefully that helps make sense!

GreatBlakes, in While trying to wrap my head around the concept of the Fediverse, I made this map. How did I do?

I'm seeing people recommend different servers within kbin (Fedia, for example), but when I visit those servers my login doesn't work (I have not registered), so it seems I would need a completely separate registration...

So when I see posts like this: https://kbin.social/m/RedditMigration/t/12526/Question-best-kbin-server-to-recommend-to-users-tomorrow what is the benefit of splintering these userbases and therefore conversations? Wouldn't this be akin to having different tables in a cafeteria, or different Discord servers? Sure, they may all have similar conversations about topics, but it isn't the same conversation about a topic. What if I want to hear what a specific user has to say, but they aren't in my server?

I see right now that Lemmy.ml is not accepting new registrations because their server is at capacity and are recommending other servers. But what is the benefit for users to go to a different server? Wouldn't they get a lessened experience since the alternate servers are smaller communities?

Am I misunderstanding something about federated communities? If I make a post in one it isn't synchronized to the others right? It just seems a little self-defeating when the big draw for sites like Reddit and Twitter is that everyone is in one place...

Edit: I see another post that says that the cross-functionality between these servers may be currently disabled, so maybe this is just a bad time to learn about how these interrelate...? I'd still love some clarification that isn't someone just linking to documentation and specs.

HarkMahlberg,
@HarkMahlberg@kbin.social avatar

My understanding is, to reach content found on other kbin instances, it is not necessary to create logins on them and go to them, rather the content on those instances can be "rebroadcast" to the instance you have an account on. You don't go to the content, the content comes to you. Likewise content you generate on your "home" instance can be rebroadcast to other instances.

I realize that's an optimistic assumption, one that I can't prove. By what mechanism the content is rebroadcast, I do not know.

0xtero,
@0xtero@kbin.social avatar

The mechanism is called ActivityPub https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ActivityPub
It's the underlying protocol behind fediverse that makes things "propagate" for different servers and services.

This is why you can, for example, read, follow and post to any of these kbin discussions from Mastodon or PIxelfeed.
It's the same protocol under all fedi-sites.
What separates them is what "document types" they display and how they display it (threads, posts etc) and the surrounding UI and tools.

Your account is local, you can have as many as you like on different sites and communities.
Your data is federated and is accessible from other sites.
This way you can have "local home" community (people on your instance), but still have "global discussions" (communities on various Lemmy instances, Mastodon etc).

What's different from Reddit, is that there's not one "sub" - there's many. For example, let's say Linux. On Reddit you'd just go to /r/linux and that's all there was. On fedi, you have /m/linux here on kbin.social, probably one at fedia.io and, you have /c/linux on multiple Lemmy instances AND you'll probably have linux discussions on Mastodon (like you can follow Linux creator Linus Torvalds at @[email protected]). This means you'll have many discussions in many places and that can be confusing at start. But it's not really that complicated. You just follow them all and you can see them all in your own /sub feed here on kbin.social (or whichever server you call home).

The server "doesn't really matter" in the end. In most cases.

Edit: If anyone is interested in the technical details of federation and ActivityPub, see here: https://www.w3.org/TR/activitypub/#Overview

smajl,

So how exactly do I discover there is /m/Linux on kbin, and /c/Linux on Lenny.ml and /m/linux on fedia? On Reddit I liked that a new account was automatically subscribed to r/news r/awww, r/music etc, and if I got bored I could browse r/all and subscribe if I found something interesting

0xtero,
@0xtero@kbin.social avatar

That's a good question.

You can go to "Magazines" and search. If you search, for example, for Linux, you'll see several communities pop up.
You can also see if they're local (they don't have domain name) or from some other instance (they have domain name).

However, those are just instances that have been federated to kbin.social (i.e. someone here has previously subscribed to them). Discovering stuff from "unknown" servers isn't super easy - there's no "global fedi directory" of communities yet (as far as I know). You have to visit the local server to discover what communities it has.

That's the downside of distributed model. On Reddit everything was in one place because that's all there was.

VerifiablyMrWonka,
@VerifiablyMrWonka@kbin.social avatar

But in a lot of cases it wasn't the case that a single subreddit had it all. Many topics had numerous sub's covering the same ground or being more specialised or having different rules.

Thats no different here. There may be an /m/linux and a /c/linux but they will likely cover different things so just subscribe to both.

Discovery is tricky though.

0xtero,
@0xtero@kbin.social avatar

But in a lot of cases it wasn't the case that a single subreddit had it all. Many topics had numerous sub's covering the same ground or being more specialised or having different rules.

True. It wasn't always easy to discover "everything" on reddit either.
I find that lot of new people joining the fediverse are unnecessarily worried about servers and instances.
Most of this works organically and you discover places, servers and communities as you go. There's no penalty in subscribing to multiple communities. Or all of them.

VerifiablyMrWonka,
@VerifiablyMrWonka@kbin.social avatar

There's no penalty in subscribing to multiple communities. Or all of them.

Absolutely this.

AdmiralSnackbar,
@AdmiralSnackbar@kbin.social avatar

Unfortunately navigation to individual magazines feels clunky right now. Nevermind that I already have 36 subscriptions on this site alone. A multimagazine function is truly necessary if the federation is going to be taken advantage of, otherwise there’s not really a practical difference between federation and just using multiple forum sites.

0xtero,
@0xtero@kbin.social avatar

A multimagazine function is truly necessary if the federation is going to be taken advantage

I'm subbed to 100+ communities. Some of them are here, but most of them are on Lemmy instances (since Lemmy has been around longer and there's are loads more of them).

Federation on kbin.social is currently a bit hit and miss because of the site load/CloudFlare DDoS protection, but I can see and subscribe to multiple communities just fine.

AdmiralSnackbar,
@AdmiralSnackbar@kbin.social avatar

Wait, so is the way it’s supposed to work like this: let’s say I want a discussion about hockey. I sub to hockey here ([email protected], I guess). In theory, it’s likely they would federate with something like [email protected]. I shouldn’t have to sub to [email protected], because they’re federated? (I know federation is a bit wonky right now. I’m mostly concerned that it feels like I have to check a few different servers to see all the content I want, but if that will be fixed then I’m not worried.)

0xtero,
@0xtero@kbin.social avatar

let’s say I want a discussion about hockey. I sub to hockey here ([email protected], I guess). In theory, it’s likely they would federate with something like [email protected].

No.

I shouldn’t have to sub to [email protected], because they’re federated?

You do have to sub to [email protected] if you want to see posts from that community.
But but once you have subscribed to [email protected] and [email protected] - you'll see posts from both of them in your feed.

gonzo0815, in While trying to wrap my head around the concept of the Fediverse, I made this map. How did I do?

That visualization shows exactly why the whole thing here is overwhelming for the average user. I feel that the federated aspect should be less focused on when talking about the fediverse. It makes sense to explain it, but many explanations on how to switch to lemmy/kbin/whatever put the whole federation thing on top of the list. I think this is a big turnoff for casual users/lurkers. They do not understand that they don't need to understand the structure of the fediverse to join, enjoy content and engage with others, so they don't even start.

I'm sure a visualization could help with that, but having a bunch of boxes and circles with arrows all over the place isn't exactly something that will mitigate the feeling of being overloaded with information. I'm not saying you didn't do a great job. "Arrows all over the place" is not meant to devaluate your work, on the contrary, it perfectly captures the feeling i have about the fediverse, but I would not use that image as an ad for it.

p3aNut,
@p3aNut@kbin.social avatar

true. I am literate in internet/computer yet the idea in general is still confusing. Navigating is also abit jarring, and I dont understand some buttons and features like “boost”. It would be great for beginners to include a tutorial for navigating the UI and a short introduction of the fediverse in level

Roundcat, in While trying to wrap my head around the concept of the Fediverse, I made this map. How did I do?
@Roundcat@kbin.social avatar

I think this illustrates why this isn't a replacement for reddit for many people. The point of reddit is it brought community and discussion to one site. It's what killed decentralized forums, and sadly, I don't think the average user is going to go back to that.

KnittingTrekker, in You can now get Kbin-it, my Reddit-like theme for kbin!
@KnittingTrekker@kbin.social avatar

I have no idea how to install this... I am using the kbin PWA on android, can someone ELI5?

blobcat,
@blobcat@kbin.social avatar

The only way to install it on kbin PWA is if you are using the PWA through kiwi browser or firefox beta/nightly (these are the only ones that support extensions, which is needed to install it)

Otome-chan, in Why did the #TwitterMigration fail?
@Otome-chan@kbin.social avatar

I've checked out mastodon and other federated twitter clones quite a few times, and never felt the need to migrate. Twitter has always been more active, and felt more polished and solid. In comparison the federated sites felt small and restricted. Since musk took over, twitter has been even better than it was before, so again no pressure felt to move. I still use twitter.

In comparison, reddit has been my home for like 12 years and this blackout has really fucked up my usage of reddit. Kbin feels nearly identical to reddit, even if it's a bit smaller. I still find myself clicking onto reddit, only to realize that my subs are missing, so then I move back over here to kbin.

Kbin is cozy. I like how I can see other federated sites' content easily, I like how kbin magazines and fediverse microblog are both clearly distinguished. It feels like I'm on a new reddit, but with the ability to see the fediverse as well. it's cozy. Provided there's still content, there's a solid chance I'll stick around.

The only thing I'd like to see is if I could do twitter/mastodon style self-posts for microblog. Right now it seems I have to select a specific magazine? But it feels weird selecting a magazine/community for just my own rambles/musings? I ended up making a magazine matching my kbin name for this purpose, but idk what the proper way to do things is...

lol,
@lol@kbin.social avatar

I feel like Twitter has died rather than become "better than it was before."

lol, in Kbin is a decentralized content aggregator and microblogging platform running on the Fediverse network
@lol@kbin.social avatar

cool

FreeBooteR69, in Why did the #TwitterMigration fail?
@FreeBooteR69@kbin.social avatar

I don't think there was a failure, there's like 10 million users more than there used to be in just a few months. The more these social media companies fuck over their users, we'll keep seeing the waves come crashing in.

jcrm, in Meta will release an ActivityPub-enabled Twitter clone/competitor this summer. Will you join in or defederate?

I don't see this as a bad thing. I hate Facebook with a passion, but if it means more money going into UX development of federated services, I'm all for it. To me that's the biggest problem with them right now.

The concerns about data use are worth noting, but I don't think are to be worried about. They can get the data anyway, and what we really need is better data privacy laws in place in general.

Otome-chan, in Duplicate Pages Across Fediverse
@Otome-chan@kbin.social avatar

They're not really "duplicate". Each instance has it's own magazines/communites/whatever, and those can have different rules, moderators, etc.

If you want to follow all of them, then follow all of them. If you only want one of them, then do one of them. Reddit had various subreddits all on the same topic, for instance /r/technology and /r/tech, and they had their own nuances, users, rules, etc. One might end up being more popular than the other for whatever reason.

Also keep in mind that they're subject to rules/moderation/control of the instance they're on. I'm using kbin.social, but if beehaw decides to do some weird thing or decide they no longer want a technology group, it's basically out of my control. Whereas a technology group here on kbin.social wouldn't be effected by beehaw's stance for their instance as a whole.

I imagine people interested in a topic will just follow all the related groups unless there's an issue with one of them.

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