• CitizenKong@lemmy.world
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      32 minutes ago

      Those innocent times when the internet wasn’t weaponized by fascists and enshittification wasn’t the norm yet. Digg might be a very early example though.

  • pedz@lemmy.ca
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    13 hours ago

    The company, which is today back under the ownership of its original founder, Kevin Rose, along with Reddit co-founder Alexis Ohanian, is launching its open beta to the public

    Huh. I assumed Rose would still be behind stuff like this, but didn’t expect Ohanian.

    I’m a ‘Digg refugee’ that fled to Reddit around 2009, I think? I knew Digg from Rose, because I was watching Tech TV and The Screen Savers, around 2002.

    Anyway I turned my back on Digg when Rose sold out and I’m also going to avoid his new attempt at money making with an AI thingy.

    Digg is dead and is gonna stay dead to me. I don’t want its rotting dug up reanimated corpse with a sticker saying “now powered by AI!”

    EDIT: Coming to think about it, Tech TV turning into G4 might have been an early form of enshittificarion.

    • vulgarcynic@sh.itjust.works
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      13 hours ago

      That edit hits like a brick. I think about techtv a couple times a year. What an interesting convergence of old media and the first stages of new media.

        • Rhoeri@piefed.world
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          15 hours ago

          Not really. There is far more they don’t share in common than they do.

          • Lost_My_Mind@lemmy.world
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            14 hours ago

            I literally got banned from reddit 2 years ago, and searched “reddit clone”. Found Lemmy, and here I am.

          • BingBong@sh.itjust.works
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            15 hours ago

            Federation means the fundamental infrastructure and dependencies are entirely different. Even if the interface may feel similar to you.

            • rudyharrelson@lemmy.radio
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              12 hours ago

              Even if the interface may feel similar to you.

              I would say it’s more than just the interface that makes Lemmy similar to Reddit. To end users, they are virtually identical services in terms of functionality. Link aggregators with built-in community forums. I think it’s fair to call Lemmy a federated Reddit clone. Not to suggest Reddit invented any of the aforementioned features, just that Lemmy’s implementation of said features is in many ways identical to Reddit’s approach because it was meant to be a Reddit alternative for the fediverse.

              Even the official Lemmy git repository compares the project to Reddit:

              Lemmy is similar to sites like Reddit, Lobste.rs, or Hacker News: you subscribe to forums you’re interested in, post links and discussions, then vote, and comment on them.

              • Brave Little Hitachi Wand@feddit.uk
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                10 hours ago

                Link aggregators are a medium, yeah. A social medium, even. Just because the underlying tech is different/better/more interesting etc, the basic user experience (as designed) is much the same.

        • OpenStars@piefed.social
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          15 hours ago

          PieFed has features that even Reddit lacks, like combining together comments across all cross-posts (and plans to tweak that still further, like add the ability to a community to opt-out of it, though I find that it helps with community discovery).

          • tal@lemmy.today
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            13 hours ago

            Historically, Usenet clients tended to respond to both groups in response to articles posted to multiple newsgroups.

            This tended to result in trolls doing things like posting “I’m in the market for a computer. Which is better, PC or Mac?” to comp.os.ms-windows.advocacy and comp.os.mac.advocacy with the intention of starting flamewars.

            • OpenStars@piefed.social
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              5 hours ago

              That exact flamewar will never not be funny!! 🤣 So sayeth we all. 🖥️💻

              Bc the answer will always be Mac if money were of zero consideration, Linux if someone lives in the real world, and only use Windows if there is both a gun to your head at that moment and a very specific game that you wanted to play requires it, and even then try emulation first.

            • OpenStars@piefed.social
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              5 hours ago

              It is actually! It is one of the features that I love the most about it, it saves so many clicks, plus the interruption of the wait time, especially for those posts that appear in like 9 communities (which for some reason isn’t nearly as rare as I might have expected, even though in those cases most communities will have like 0-1 comments, even if some others have >100).

              That and maybe the the translation of all post links into relative ones on your local instance are perhaps my favorites of the recent additions. And the ability to read deleted posts instead of a page that looks more like a server error that doesn’t even acknowledge that the post used to exist at some point in time. There’s a lot to have to choose from!:-)

  • pelespirit@sh.itjust.works
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    15 hours ago

    No

    They’re betting that AI can help to address some of the messiness and toxicity of today’s social media landscape. At the same time, social platforms will need a new set of tools to ensure they’re not taken over by AI bots posing as people.

    “We obviously don’t want to force everyone down some kind of crazy KYC process,” said Rose in an interview with TechCrunch, referring to the “know your customer” verification process used by financial institutions to confirm someone’s identity.

      • Sarah@lemmy.world
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        12 hours ago

        LOL thanks for the tip.

        I created an account manually. Now I can’t create a community.

        Digg doesn’t allow nsfw anyway so now I am back here