I see it's once again time to post this: https://taggart-tech.com/discord-alternatives
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I see it's once again time to post this: https://taggart-tech.com/discord-alternatives
you seem to be very knowledgeable and fair about all these, but I so want the answer to be #matrix cause it could also theoretically do all our messaging and video chat and even POTS eventually. I feel like if we want the less techy to embrace our world, it can't be just about switching apps yet again, but also must at least offer the possibility of eliminating the need for other apps. IDK.
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you seem to be very knowledgeable and fair about all these, but I so want the answer to be #matrix cause it could also theoretically do all our messaging and video chat and even POTS eventually. I feel like if we want the less techy to embrace our world, it can't be just about switching apps yet again, but also must at least offer the possibility of eliminating the need for other apps. IDK.
@wjmaggos Matrix can be the answer! I was very optimistic, and I still think there's a lot to like. For private communities, I think it's wonderful. The problem arises in large public communities because of the lack of moderation tooling. Without that aspect of the platform, it's simply too dangerous to open the doors to the general internet.
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I see it's once again time to post this: https://taggart-tech.com/discord-alternatives
missing consideration: video chatting
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I see it's once again time to post this: https://taggart-tech.com/discord-alternatives
@mttaggart good list, but I don't think it's fair to Matrix today.
The CSAM attacks happened, but moderation tools have taken a big leap since. You can quite easily use a moderation bot that subscribes to public ban lists. This almost fully ends any generic spam.
Also you talk about matrix.org as "flagship server". Friends don't let friends use matrix.org. Use small/medium sized servers instead and you get better performance. Same applies to Mastodon - don't use mastodon.social, decentralize!
My main criticism would be the buggy mobile clients, and super slow migration from Element Classic to Element X. Element web/desktop are decent quality, but far from polished.Oh and you don't even mention bridges. Other alternatives don't even try to support them. Bridges are a key feature.
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I see it's once again time to post this: https://taggart-tech.com/discord-alternatives
@mttaggart A another knock against Matrix is the ordering of messages. I've been using it more recently, and I struggle to piece together a conversation because the messages are in the wrong order.
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I see it's once again time to post this: https://taggart-tech.com/discord-alternatives
@mttaggart what about the ones that don't have AI shoved down users' throats?
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@mttaggart good list, but I don't think it's fair to Matrix today.
The CSAM attacks happened, but moderation tools have taken a big leap since. You can quite easily use a moderation bot that subscribes to public ban lists. This almost fully ends any generic spam.
Also you talk about matrix.org as "flagship server". Friends don't let friends use matrix.org. Use small/medium sized servers instead and you get better performance. Same applies to Mastodon - don't use mastodon.social, decentralize!
My main criticism would be the buggy mobile clients, and super slow migration from Element Classic to Element X. Element web/desktop are decent quality, but far from polished.Oh and you don't even mention bridges. Other alternatives don't even try to support them. Bridges are a key feature.
The CSAM attacks happened, but moderation tools have taken a big leap since.
I would appreciate links to these new resources. Last I saw, Draupnir was still very much inadequate.
As for server choice, I think Mastodon itself is evidence of what a fussy server selection process can do to adoption.
This reply is written from the perspective of a computer enthusiast. Probably a volunteer sysadmin/self hoster—like me. We cannot be the target for a general alternative.
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@mttaggart what about the ones that don't have AI shoved down users' throats?
@admin I think you'll find the list refreshingly AI-free. While Discourse has plugins, they are optional and not default.
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@admin I think you'll find the list refreshingly AI-free. While Discourse has plugins, they are optional and not default.
@mttaggart from rocket.chat's front page:
"AI-powered conversations
Automate the busywork, surface the right insights instantly, and keep your teams to drive
operational success." -
@mttaggart from rocket.chat's front page:
"AI-powered conversations
Automate the busywork, surface the right insights instantly, and keep your teams to drive
operational success."@admin I would separate marketing hype from product reality. Again, optional modules and nothing doing in self-hosted.
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The CSAM attacks happened, but moderation tools have taken a big leap since.
I would appreciate links to these new resources. Last I saw, Draupnir was still very much inadequate.
As for server choice, I think Mastodon itself is evidence of what a fussy server selection process can do to adoption.
This reply is written from the perspective of a computer enthusiast. Probably a volunteer sysadmin/self hoster—like me. We cannot be the target for a general alternative.
@mttaggart for example etke.cc offers a public draupnir instance: https://etke.cc/help/bots/draupnir/
That combined with good policy lists should be quite good against spam. Of course targeted attacks are harder to block.Also I think I heard that in FOSDEM Element said that there will be some kind of server chooser at last.. IMO using matrix.org as default has been a bad choice. Of course a curated list of servers makes a handful of new problems.
Currently a list of open servers can be found at https://servers.joinmatrix.org/
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I incentive moved this topic from Uncategorized
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Since I wrote this, many have introduced me to movim, and it's pretty slick! I'm still experimenting, but I like a lot of what I see. Still missing moderation tools for groups, though.
Movim – Responsive web-based cross-platform XMPP client
Movim is a kickass distributed blogging and messaging platform built on the industry-standard XMPP protocol
(movim.eu)
@mttaggart that actually looks like one of the best options you posted so far, have to look into that one!
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I see it's once again time to post this: https://taggart-tech.com/discord-alternatives
@mttaggart Nice! I thought about discord alternatives too!
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I see it's once again time to post this: https://taggart-tech.com/discord-alternatives
@mttaggart FWIW, we've been using rocketchat for years at work with about 100 users and we haven't missed any of the paid features yet. The biggest downside is how hard they push you towards their "plans".
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I see it's once again time to post this: https://taggart-tech.com/discord-alternatives
@mttaggart You had me (discourse mangler/wrangler) at the opening meme.
Be more distracted.
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@32x33 I miss the CrankySec community, but I really don't miss Discord.
@murdoccc We miss you too, bro!
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I see it's once again time to post this: https://taggart-tech.com/discord-alternatives
@mttaggart Huh, Stoat is that bad? It's the one I'm seeing people recommend.
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I see it's once again time to post this: https://taggart-tech.com/discord-alternatives
@mttaggart @janeishly I've never understood why people like Discord. I've always just used Jitsi. Simple, and FOSS licensed, so I can run it on my own server. You need to be careful with security, but I usually just start it up and shut it down as needed.
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I see it's once again time to post this: https://taggart-tech.com/discord-alternatives
If Discord gets a 4/5 for functionality then something is fucked up, it's an appallingly bad piece of software that gets in the way more than anything else. It's a disaster.
I would rather use phpBB and an IRC server for chat.
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I see it's once again time to post this: https://taggart-tech.com/discord-alternatives
@mttaggart I am in this picture AND I LIKE IT

p.s. https://blog.codinghorror.com/launching-the-rural-guaranteed-minimum-income-initiative/