[-] Bowen@beehaw.org 12 points 11 months ago

Anyone who's played an online game in the past 30+ years knows that nothing is secure on a client machine. You have to rotate offsets and encryption keys constantly, and even then you buy yourself a few days at the most. You'd think google would have actual good engineers, what are they paying all that money for?

[-] Bowen@beehaw.org 4 points 11 months ago

I remember going to the vmware communities looking for help almost 20 years ago and some smug person was really upset that I didn't use the right wording when I was starting out. He spent something like 2 whole days worth of posting. It was a chore to divine what he was saying while stumbling through his weird rant/lecture about proper terminology. I eventually called him out on it and never went back.

So long story short, communities and companies who don't nip this kind of behavior in the bud and heavily moderate the assholes almost universally turn into the next expertsexchange community. Stack Overflow kind of leaned heavily into enshitification because of this, they eventually just stopped caring about what was being put on their forums, maintaining high content quality, and getting rid of argumentative power-users. Ironically reddit was a much nicer community and usually you'd find an answer or get help without the attitude, especially in the IT space.

[-] Bowen@beehaw.org 8 points 1 year ago

Like @Lockely@pawb.social mentions, they did intend to clean house by dropping the board with a buyout.

I, personally, am not too bothered by the consolidation of game studios. There are plenty of AAA game developers and indie devs are filling other niches (and sometimes become AAA themselves). It's a different industry from something like making cars with high production costs and huge barriers to entry.

[-] Bowen@beehaw.org 15 points 1 year ago

It's less the focus on consolidation and more getting out the very problematic leadership from Activision (Bobby and his crew). Not that Microsoft is a bastion of progressive thought or leadership, but it's suspected they would be much less likely to have covered up things like the Cosby room, suicide due to harassment, or the theft of breast milk. Activision's leadership has some deep seated problems with sexism in general.

[-] Bowen@beehaw.org 13 points 1 year ago

The return of phpbb, who had that on their 2023 bingo card?

[-] Bowen@beehaw.org 5 points 1 year ago

Plus discord's forum piece is straight up garbage. Moving your entire platform to discord is as crazy as doing it to reddit honestly.

[-] Bowen@beehaw.org 5 points 1 year ago

I'm thinking that's why that memo got leaked, there's already dissension among the ranks. I'm sure he's absolutely livid like his idol Mr Musk.

[-] Bowen@beehaw.org 4 points 1 year ago

Sure, that is pretty crappy. But I liken that to employees who build their budgets and personal financing around bonuses. Nice to have, but not a guarantee and wrong thing to assume you'll get them. Always assume equity will be zero, IPOs benefit C-levels and investors heavily.

I can't find much on reddit's equity offerings for employees but I imagine it's, at best, a pittance. Their other benefits are top notch though. No wonder they "don't turn a profit".

[-] Bowen@beehaw.org 14 points 1 year ago

Fidelity dropping reddit's valuation by ~40% made me go "oh boy that's bad news" when I saw it at the start of the month.

Imagine thinking you're cashing out at 10 billion and now you're only getting 6. The horror.

[-] Bowen@beehaw.org 23 points 1 year ago

It's all coming together now. Elon is his role model and reddit's light treatment of alt-right nonsense under the guise of "free speech" is because he's a true believer (most have always suspected this). Not that it's all that surprising I guess, he is a CEO.

[-] Bowen@beehaw.org 9 points 1 year ago

Human accounts and generally the main content creators on top of it. The ones who create posts, the ones who drive discussion and commentary.

The bulk of their ad revenue probably comes from lurkers and consumers, but their platform is built entirely on the aggregation of a small subset of the power users. You need both. He doesn't seem to really understand that. Sure you can replace mods, maybe they're better, maybe they're worse, but you can't replace content creators and force conversation.

He's definitely sweating bullets by the way he's throwing everything at the wall to see what sticks.

[-] Bowen@beehaw.org 5 points 1 year ago

It also happens on Reddit too. There's like 3 AITA subs, a few subs for Making a Murderer because I guess someone had some issues with the mods of the original one being a cop or something.

I don't see anything different with lemmy honestly, but it would be nice to have the option to kind of merge into bigger ones. I imagine that's in the roadmap at some point.

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Bowen

joined 1 year ago