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this post was submitted on 31 Jul 2023
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Asklemmy
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Two things: the data on the instance will be gone.
The posts/comments that were replicated on other instances will stay, but they will be defederated, meaning they will not ever be synced up woth other instances' replications of these posts/comments. Every instance will just have their own, insular copy.
I see this as a big issue for content going forward. I get that reddit is one single point of failure but I wonder how you can keep knowledge in a static state when most instances lose money and it's a hobby. What happens when the owner grows tired.
How often do you revisit forum posts you made in 2007? Some content doesn't need to be preserved
It's not about visiting a forum post I made in 2007. It's about visiting a forum post about an obscure issue that someone solved in 2007.
relevant XKCD
This is so stupidly relevant to strange motherboard problems. I hope that lemmy is able to be scraped by web crawlers to help assist with these sorts of problems in the future.
That part won't change. If your current instance was federated with an obscure community/instance before that community/instance disappeared, then you will still have the content from back then and will be able to find the discussion and solution
Even if my instance never interacted with that instance?
Well no, but then you weren't going to find it anyway, even if the other instance was still around
I would argue the instance still gets indexed by Google and if it was around I could Google search for the result.
Ok, but in that instance, unless that niche instance that disappeared never federated with anyone, then their content is going to be available on the instances they did federate with before they went away, and those will continue to show in google
It would certainly be nice to replace stack overflow with a good Lemmy instance, but have the data guaranteed to remain around.
That still works with replication. What won't work is having any discussion going forward be replicated over all replications. But the replication works fine for archival purpouses.