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How did we move from forums to Reddit, Facebook groups, and Discord?

dbzer0.com How did we move from forums to Reddit, Facebook groups, and Discord?

From the first moment I first went online in 1996, forums were the main place to hang out. In fact the very first thing I did was join an online forum run by the Greek magazine "PC Master" so I could directly to my favourite game reviewers (for me it was Tsourinakis, for those old [...]

How did we move from forums to Reddit, Facebook groups, and Discord?

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/post/28930199

A bit of an effortpost :)

Please do crosspost in more fitting communities if you think of any

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Quitter Reddit @jlai.lu Camus @jlai.lu
How did we move from forums to Reddit, Facebook groups, and Discord?

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  • I think Mastodon is very far from standard. Way I hear it from the developers, it's lemmy that is following the Apub standard. But I will disclaim that I'm not an expert to judge either way.

    As for the posts outside communities? That makes sense lemmy-wise I think. Where would those posts be? But it doesn't make sense for Discourse, since they are indeed separated into topics.

    • I think Mastodon is very far from standard

      I think it's much closer to standard than Lemmy and I've looked into it quite a bit recently. ActivityPub is unfortunately quite focused on microblogging. Honestly lemmys way of doing it is a little hacky.

      As for the posts outside communities? That makes sense lemmy-wise I think. Where would those posts be?

      I actually think it's quite straightforward, they'd just be on a users page. This is actually how Reddit has also done it ever since they introduced the feature (much before they enshittified everything else).

      You can think of it like every users profile being a community of its own but only the user itself can post to it. Just conceptually speaking.

      That would also let you follow users just as you can follow communities.

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