I put on my robe and wizard hat.
(I am in the UK and make TTRPGs. He/Him.)
Lemmy is awesome - I’m really enjoying it. Like the early days of Digg, even Fark, etc. Quality stuff happening!
Performance has improved, but many niche communities need more growth and engagement.
Duplicate communities across Lemmy instances are a bit of a nightmare in some ways - although by design, and also have advantages.
r/all on Reddit looks pretty different now, unless that’s just my perception. A lot of subs I’d never seen, more low quality stuff with less engagement.
I think it remains to be seen. The rapid growth of .world has been the first real production test of how the platform handles more users and content. Amazing work by the team, but there are a lot of rough edges and it is a new platform with a lot of unknowns.
The things that spring to mind for me are:
Sign up needs to be streamlined and made more simple, and find a way to not overload individual servers without just randomly assigning people to instances.
Live defects, bugs and things feeling rough around the edges.
Back-end build and scaling.
Duplicate communities across instances.
Account migration between instances.
Data retention past x period - how will various instances handle this with a large number of users.
GDPR and data request compliance from individuals, governments, etc.
Funding the costs and resources associated with rapid, large growth. How do people know what their money is going to fund? I think there needs to be real transparency, public roadmaps and backlogs and understand how / if admins are accountable.
How the platform and users will respond to large corporations or even individual admins on instances adding adverts, using / selling user data in ways the userbase do not expect.
I did this too, everything had feet by the time I finished. Everything.