- cross-posted to:
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- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
I’ll be honest, I really believed in Plebbit.
The idea of a truly decentralized, peer-to-peer social platform felt like something the internet desperately needed. A space beyond centralized servers, censorship, and platform overlords. Something that wasn’t just “Reddit, but a real shift in how we interact online.
Plebbit pitched that dream. They talked about p2p everything : hosting, moderation, identity. They made it sound like the future was finally within reach. And I wanted to believe.
But over time… it became clear. It was all talk. All hype. All roadmap, no road.
Constant delays with vague excuses.
Overpromising, under delivering at every stage.
“Community governance” that never materialized beyond buzzwords.
A dev team that slowly drifted into silence while the protocol rotted. I kept checking in, hoping something had changed. That maybe I’d been too impatient. But no. It wasn’t just slow, it was never real to begin with.
So, I’m sticking with Lemmy. It’s not perfect, but at least it’s real. Maybe we’ll get the true decentralization we’ve been promised one day
I keep getting the suspicion that many of these flashy projects are red herrings paid by Musk or Zuckerberg or whoever to stop people from actually developing reasonable alternatives.
Because shit like this keeps happening over and over.
Lol pretty sure if we’re funded by these guys we would’ve been way faster with our development. P2P is hard, many pitfalls
Turns out good web design skills does not always translate into other skills.
Protocol implementation plebbit-js is separated from client like Seedit