Sean Tilley
I write articles and interview people about the Fediverse and decentralized technologies. In my spare time, I play lots of video games. I also like to make pixel art, music, and games.
- 7 Posts
- 7 Comments
Sean Tilley@lemmy.worldOPto
Fediverse@lemmy.world•The Fediverse and Content Creation: MonetizationEnglish
2·21 days agoSilverpill might not like me making this comparison, but its form and function are shockingly similar to OnlyFans.
Sean Tilley@lemmy.worldOPto
Fediverse@lemmy.world•The Fediverse and Content Creation: MonetizationEnglish
5·21 days agoOpenCollective is a pretty solid open source contender in my experience. It’s not perfect, but it’s definitely workable.
Sean Tilley@lemmy.worldOPto
Fediverse@lemmy.world•The Fediverse and Content Creation: MonetizationEnglish
2·21 days agoPeerTube’s support button is, at best, a lightbox that holds a text string. It’s fine for highlighting links, but you still kind of have to dance around with having an account in another system to make the payment.
Sean Tilley@lemmy.worldOPto
Fediverse@lemmy.world•The Fediverse and Content Creation: MonetizationEnglish
1·21 days agoYou might be interested in trying out Nostr. I know it’s more Bitcoin Lightning focused, which admittedly is not for everybody, but they’ve managed to make a lot of stuff work when it comes to paying one another.
In the technical sense, Nostr is really great.
Sean Tilley@lemmy.worldOPto
Fediverse@lemmy.world•The Fediverse and Content Creation: MonetizationEnglish
4·22 days agoYeah, the YouTube algorithm itself is a huge problem. I think about the fact that there are entire slop studios out there trying to ride algorithm trends, churning out crap to push onto YouTube Kids so that they’ll do numbers and make a lot of money from it.
Like, I have nothing against the concept of a recommendation algorithm itself, but the relationship I just described is nightmare fuel.
Sean Tilley@lemmy.worldOPto
Fediverse@lemmy.world•CrowdBucks is a new payment system for the FediverseEnglish
6·4 months agoSupport for other providers is coming. Bandwagon is in a similar situation. The overall goal is to support a multitude of options, so that no one payment solution has a monopoly.








Nope! The main thing going for a distributed ledger would be global consistency, but there are some very negative downsides. It’s slow, scales poorly, puts a massive burden on admins operating instances, and the blocks would be effectively immutable…meaning that if the contents of each activity were fully nested inside of a block, edits or deletions would be impossible. We already see problems with CSAM showing up in various blockchains, and a Fediverse blockchain used for social purposes would be no different.
It’s just not the right tool for the job when it comes to social networks. There were a few early experiments in this area, such as Twister, which tried to build a Twitter clone on top of a blockchain using DHT. It has a huge list of limitations, though, and development stopped around 2020.