I guess I'm just legitimately confused about how to feel about it all.
The freedom of Lemmy and the fediverse let's people choose how to interact with it.
If a user is looking for a free to use , open source, ad-free experience then that's their choice.
If others are happy to pay for an app because they prefer the experience that app provides them they can choose to do so.
I also wouldn't spend time in my day coming into defend organizations that want to monetize on open source community projects either.
OP read that Boost may contain code used for tracking, then started spewing some conspiracy that "Boost is tracking your data for profiling and more!" without any proof or any actual research.
This isn't a case of defending some giant corporation, it's just stopping tedious drama before it spreads.
If you check OPs profile they've been spreading this for over a week. When I first saw this thread the masses were heavily upvoting the conspiracy and downvoting anyone disagreeing.
Every so often software developers need to eat food and live beneath shelter.
The developer of Boost
@rmayayo@lemmy.world provides a free version that's supported by ads, or you can purchase an ad free experience for a one time cost. That's been a standard business since forever.
People are quick to create communities but they sit unused, attract few posts and fewer subscribers. Often the mods move on so even if new posts were to appear they'd be unmoderated.
The simple reason for that is there isn't enough demand. Lemmy is still small it's too early to be spinning out ever more narrowed niche communities. If you think content belongs elsewhere then report it to the mods and let them decide. If they see a surge in unwanted Q&A topics then they can amend posting guidelines to direct people elsewhere or to a Q&A thread or something.
But if people do want bustling communities they just need to give them broader appeal and only splinter into niches when the demand arises.
For example rather than creating a community for a specific British 1960s sci-fi TV show. An existing retro TV community is probably sufficient, or failing that a general TV community.
It's not going to happen. Labour need to put funds towards fixing the NHS and other state services systems that have been systematically dismantled by the conservatives.
With America isolating itself times are uncertain so funding has to be set aside to deal with inevitable turmoil.
Finally, European nations need to decide whether to accept America handing Ukraine over to Russia or if they continue to support Ukraine. Even if Europe withdraws resources from Ukraine there needs to be a reassessment of military spending because NATO doesn't look particularly reliable right now.
There simply won't be anything left to pledge towards a climate revolution.
It has always been a pet peeve of mine that I would find an interesting topic while browsing all on reddit, with a healthy number of upvotes and comments but regardless mods will bluster in and lock it because it's not quite on topic.
Back in the early days of Internet forums when moderators found an off topic post they would move it to the relevant sub , and there would typically be an "Other", "Off-Topic" or "Random" as a catch all.
I've never understood why threaded social media is missing such a basic moderation function.
If you want to be taken seriously you should re-word your issue and the title.
Be explicit about:
The issue you've linked is literally just a complaint with zero context.