Now I am confused, are you able to make changes to the Lemmy codebase? A fork?
That's not what I'm doing yet, although it is definitely something that I would need to do ahead.
The platform that I'm developing has a much larger scope compared to Lemmy. It's not just a "Fediverse's Reddit", but something entirely different. It has community chat functionalities similar to those of discord for example. Communities would also be able to organize in person events and so on.
If you want to find a way to fund development, why not just work with the current team?
I'm achieving most of the above functionalities without altering the lemmy backend source code. I'm doing this by kinda creatively using the Lemmy Client that I'm developing.
Lemmy's entire goal is very different from my goal for the coop. My 0 competency in Rust also makes me useless for Lemmy devs.
I'm essentially just taking Lemmy's source code, n jerry rigging it to get the functionality that I want while ensuring that my platform won't affect Lemmy users in a bad way during federation.
Of course, I would have to do some backend work to get certain functionality, but I can do that without touching Lemmy's backend code. Not touching Lemmy's code would be good for maintenance n overall development at least for now, when the only resource is me haha.
I have an MVP coming up by this Sunday, so I would start posting about it from a new account. I find the client to be quite unique n beautiful looking, n m quite excited to present it to the world now haha.
U would have to have software development skills for that. What if u'r an Amazon worker who just wants to have a platform where u n ur co-workers can freely organise a strike without censorship? U'r screwed now.
You raise very valid points here n in the text that follows. However, if u think about it, it turns to a democracy vs dictatorship debate.
"What would the peasants know about governing a country? A country should be governed only by experts because they know what's best for everyone". Of course u'r not saying stuff to this extent, but that's kinda it. And u'r right. Dictatorships have a high risk to reward ratio. If u get a good dictator, progress can be tremendous. If u get a bad dictator, u die. Democracies generally tend to be a lot more stable and last longer.
U can see the above trend in case of failure rates of cooperatives and corporations. Coops have a significantly less rate of failure when compared to corporations..
As for why we don't have social media coops? Well, social media is a pretty recent invention. It required a ton of investment to become profitable. In the capitalist model that we live in today, equity is the biggest n easiest way of fundraising. U can't do equity based fundraising for coops. Fundraising for coops has to be in the form of bonds n loans, which is very hard to get for such new tech.
That's my hypothesis as to why we don't have many social media coops running around. Take groceries however. There r retail coops practically everywhere, n in some countries they make up a huge huge chunk of the market share. Take the example of credit unions. They've practically existed forever n have provided much better services to their members when compared to banks.