My lemmy interaction was quite limited up until today.
Some time ago, when the first reddit migration happend, I took over a stale community. It faded and there was nothing to moderate, write or comment. Also most communities I'm subscribed to, do not produced so much relevant content. I fell back to reddit.
I mean, by nature you can only react on stuff like DDOS attacks.
As far as I understand, when the load from a certain network is spiking you try to drop packages or block the origin all together -- depending on the situation.
However, oftentimes bigger attacks swap their origin easily, which makes it hard to react.
They said something along the line when they explained the DDoS. However, they are addressing the issue and there is no need to suppose they are not or in the wrong way.
Your are simply not sparking a vivid, solution oriented discussion. Your self understanding in that matter is far of as you come along as complaining and a little Karen-esque.
In my opinion re-iterating that you only want to discuss this already solved case, does not help that matter and do not help people to sympathize with your cause.
You might want to take a look at the place the development takes place github.com/Memmy-App/memmy . They use the platform to also procure a list of issues they discuss an work along.
Be aware: anybody could suppose a Feature using that issue board. If this is too technical, the readme supposes to engage with the devs in this community or via discord.
I am more than willing to also invest in „just their time fun projects“ if that keeps the motivation high.
Besides: they might need to include other APIs $$$ have future or hidden costs for hosting or want to pay for media (logos) or licenses and whatnot. Or simply afford actual testing devices instead of simulators…
Long story short I would embrace paying for the App, be it one-time or recurring.
My lemmy interaction was quite limited up until today.
Some time ago, when the first reddit migration happend, I took over a stale community. It faded and there was nothing to moderate, write or comment. Also most communities I'm subscribed to, do not produced so much relevant content. I fell back to reddit.