what?
bigMouthCommie
>Look, you made a request and I already denied it.
I'm not going to let your post and unchallenged, especially in this forum. the problem isn't that your language is imprecise, it's actively misleading. even if you won't change your behavior, perhaps someone who might have thought it was acceptable will no longer feel that way.
>If you understand what I mean, then the communication was successful
just because i understood doesn't mean anyone else would. i've been using ostatus-enabled services over a decade. meta had a huge product launch with threads and promised to federate. it is confusing to refer to the fediverse as the threadiverse and serves to support an EEE agenda, whether you mean to or not.
i don't believe she cheated, but i also don't care.
i do think being a conventionally attractive blonde did help her get coverage.
i also want turn it in to die in a fire.
i'm very conflicted about your comment, but i'm not conflicted about this situation at all: stop using turn it in, and put the girl back in school.
you certainly have the power to shape how people think about things by naming them, and you seem to understand that. the fact that there is an activitypub implementation called "threads" and that is owned by some of the worst social media villains is likely to confuse people about it and play right into the EEE plans that we know for-profit technology companies love.
so don't do that.
turn it in is a fucking content farm anyway. you sign over your rights to them. we should insist schools stop using it.
you don't have to lose your social graph to move instances though. mastodon has had account migration for years, now.
Please dont' call it the "Threadiverse" the biggest advantage of Lemmy/kbin/mbin is ActivityPub and the fediverse.
what's the license?
the experience is a little different, since, instead of seeing articles with a comment count, I see comments and articles in reverse chronological order all together on one timeline. essentially, the Lemmy community "boosts" every comment and article, and I subscribe to the community.
it's a great way to find conversations happening RIGHT NOW but it is not a very good way to see which threads are popular/up voted
as far as I can tell, direct messages and user reports are flat-out broken between the services, so you'll want to maintain a Lemmy account anyway for those uses.
if you can get over all that, you might like it. it's twitter-like.
I follow Lemmy..this is a mastodon account
as far as I know, you can't follow a Lemmy account from Lemmy.