1 point

Ah, a traditional forum. Makes sense.

Since we’re talking about forums, who here is old enough to remember the IMDB message boards?

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1 point

I’m old enough to remember dialing into different BBSs with my 14.4 Kbps modem.

These days my teenaged son is complaining that his 12GB Fortnite update isn’t downloading fast enough and he has to wait a whole 20 minutes.

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0 points

I thought this was an announcement they were moving to the Fediverse.

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0 points

Seriously, how about they stand up a lemmy instance? That way peeps could follow their forums without having to travel to a proprietary place.

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1 point

According to the footer they’re running MyBB so although it is more centralised, I wouldn’t call it proprietary.

What advantages would Lemmy have over the traditional style of forum for their use case?

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1 point

Now all they need to do is move away from twitter.

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2 points

It’s great that they’re going back to traditional, self-hosted forums instead of corporate social media for support and discussions, but damn, I don’t miss having to manage hundreds of accounts with unique logins for each forum. I understand that they want more control over forum moderation and the Fediverse’s “anyone can post there” system makes it troublesome. It would be great if there was more widespread adoption of decentralized, “one login to access everything” systems.

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1 point
*

Federated logins are a thing! The challenge is finding one that’s open and privacy-friendly. Unfortunately the widest-used ones come from entities like Google or Facebook with a marked interest in preying on user data. Mozilla used to maintain a federated system (Persona) but they discontinued it. I know Ubuntu offers one for all their services (bug trackers, forums etc.) but not sure if it’s open to third party systems. Perhaps there are others worth using.

Alternatively, you can aggregate all your logins in one place across devices and browsers. Firefox Accounts are a very simple method of doing this (presuming you use Firefox everywhere), and you can choose to only sync logins rather than bookmarks, plugins etc. And of course there are other dedicated password managers, with or without online sync, open or closed source, self-hosted or private hosted etc.

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1 point

Since I’m now using a password manager I’ve been having less issue with creating as many accounts as needed.
But I do agree it’d be great to have a single sign on.

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1 point

But then you have the same centralization issue - and it’s even worse, if the central authority has a fit for some reason about you, now you’re locked out of many completely unrelated sites.

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1 point

Finally. I’m happy to see them moving from the subreddit. It wasn’t terrible, but a forum will be better I think in the long run.

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