So you'd rather concrete jungle over lawns? I feel like if you banned grass lawns that's what you'd get.
The more users the more content there is though which is ultimately what I want as a user.
This is even more important for more niche communities a lot of which are still very quiet/dead/non-existent on Lemmy relative to reddit.
Who produce emissions because they make a product that ultimately ends up being used by a consumer...
How do you practically impose this policy?
I think the big worry with AI and the arts is the threat of it putting legit artists out of business.
I think film is less likely to be effected, but certainly typical art and music could be effected pretty badly.
You need to sneak it into their house and put it up somewhere!
I mean, at the moment I'll just take most active. I believe in the idea of the fediverse giving us multiple communities for different vibes of talking about the same topics but for now I'll just take having communities that are a bit more active
I went for a 5 year mortgage rather than a 2 year at my last renewal. With how much rates have increased by recently, I think this will have saved me about £15k by the end of the 5 years.
My app only really stopped working yesterday.
I wouldn't say massively different, but I do find it pretty stale content wise recently. Only started using Lemmy today and worry that it's just a bit empty content wise for the moment...
Not Zuck, but there is definitely a accessibility issue at the moment imo
Is an app for viewing the website. Lots of the apps offered better viewing, filtering and search features for reddit compared to the normal website.
Yea, the download size was getting too big (or they couldn't be bothered QA-ing new gear with old content) so they started deleting old stuff.
Means if you start playing now you can't play the story from the beginning which seems pretty terrible to me.