Yeah exactly. With the example I gave, there’s a good amount of content on each, but none of them is so active that I’d want to follow it alone.
I was kind of joking, but now that I think about it isn’t that better? The problem isn’t really advertisers having your data, it’s companies doing skeezy things to be able to make more money with your data.
This way, instance hosts are free from that incentive and can just focus on making a good website.
I was kind of joking, but now that I think about it isn’t that better? The problem isn’t really advertisers having your data, it’s companies doing skeezy things to be able to make more money with your data.
This way, instance hosts are free from that incentive and can just focus on making a good website.
Can someone explain why r/privacy is so up in arms about this? Seems fairly obvious that my actions in the public domain are public, but they’re all “Lemmy doesn’t care about your privacy”. Why?
At least you know the instance host isn’t selling your data right? The advertisers already have it 🤪
Lol yeah but we were 12 back then and we still understood the internet better than anyone else 🙃
No shit. Yesterday I scooted a bench and smashed one toe on my right foot so badly I couldn’t tell what was toenail and what was… not. I literally feel your pain
I was once trapped in a spiral where I was constantly thinking about the game. So much so that I couldn’t possibly admit it to the people around me, which is kind of like forfeiting the game. But then I realized that my forfeiture actually freed me of the game. So in losing the game, I actually won it.
Hold up, that’s not how the game works. Nobody ever loses the game. You’re stuck playing it forever. You just lose a game point every time you think of it.
@mookulator
@lemmy.world