Humans who run instances are real people who have jobs and mortgages and kids. I also like having piracy communities around to balance the greedy ass corporations trying to control media and copyright…I’m glad to know they are there if I need them or feel like screwing around with it. I just wonder if the people ranting all indignantly acting like instances are competing for their usership would feel the same if the most active instance was on a server physically sitting in their basement, or paid for by money tied to them in the real world. Yes it seems pretty unlikely that you’re ever going to run into issues with law enforcement, copyright claims, lawsuits…but how much would you risk for a fucking hobby you do for free? Would you risk your house? Your job? I would not. Grow up. No one cares what instance you use.

  • Blaze@discuss.tchncs.de
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    1 year ago

    Curious to see how this thread will go, as it seems this opinion is indeed unpopular.

    I agree with you 100%

    A few points I’ve noted in the previous threads

    • people confuse defederation and community blocking (in this case, it’s the latter)
    • people assume that Lemmy.world is hosted in the US while it’s EU based
    • people just feel like they need to announce they are leaving while this is not Reddit, most of the users open an alt and move on with their lives.
  • Zak@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    A bit of looking makes me think the admins have a legitimate concern here. Platform immunity in the EU isn’t quite as strong as it is in the US in general, and it’s specifically weaker with regard to copyright.

    A successful copyright lawsuit (maybe even an unsuccessful one) could bring down the whole .world network, which hosts multiple federated services for many people. There could be personal liability for the admins as well. The admins should try to protect against outcomes like that, and the EU should probably strengthen its platform immunity laws.