They’ve also forced r/Steam to reopen or be replaced by powermods https://www.reddit.com/r/Steam/comments/14bvwe1/rsteam_and_reddits_new_policies/
They’ve also forced r/Steam to reopen or be replaced by powermods https://www.reddit.com/r/Steam/comments/14bvwe1/rsteam_and_reddits_new_policies/
Admittedly I haven’t read much from them in the last year or two but usually ars is consistently good
It doesn’t all go back to lemmy, but lemmy and kbin speak the same language (ActivityPub) and can talk to each other (they are federated). Others in this thread have compared it to email where you might be on different services (gmail, yahoo, icloud) but they can still all understand messages coming from each other. The fediverse is similar, but instead of just sending a message to another site to put in your inbox like email, lemmy/kbin/mastodon/etc can ask each other for stuff on an external site and display it to you as if it was all coming from the same site.
In our case kbin calls up lemmy.world and asks for what everybody there is saying on some post. Lemmy.world tells kbin about all the comments and upvotes so kbin can plug it into the same style of page you see for everything else here. Even though it’s happening on a separate server and underlying platform, they still know how to exchange data
Kbin is federated with a bunch of the lemmy servers as well. If you look at the address of the post it’s kbin/m(agazine)/lemmyworld@lemmy.world, so we’re seeing a post from the LemmyWorld community (called magazines on kbin) on the lemmy server https://lemmy.world/
I promise it makes sense after a while lol
edit: the users of lemmy can also see what we say over here on kbin because kbin and lemmy talk to each other. This post lives on that lemmy instance
Kind of? It’s certainly companies actively moving towards shittier services at the same time as others, but I don’t think it’s as much of explicit and intentional collusion as it is high school clique prom politics and VC money drying up post rate hikes. There’s more of a focus by investors on generating profit over growth at this point because money is no longer free. The safest play for a lot of these boardrooms is to not stand out as a company not realigning priorities to reflect this.