Discord was already succumbing to enshitification. Now with their intention to be owned by Wall Street, that trajectory will certainly accelerate at warp speed once the change of hands happens.

Anyone already get ahead of this and find a solid alternative?

Right now I’m on the fence between Element for Matrix, and Revolt. Both seem to have their pros and cons and I can’t find a clear “winner”.

  • @BroBot9000@lemmy.world
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    85 days ago

    Why use Element for matrix?

    From what I can tell it collets and links data to you: Location, identifiers and contact information.

    How is that private or better than Signal?

    • Possibly linux
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      35 days ago

      The Element web client will break encryption when you clear your browser data.

      • @tofu@lemmy.nocturnal.garden
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        24 days ago

        Does it? I think it logs you out and after logging in again, you need to provide your encryption key/verify with other device again in order to access the history. Or wdym with breaking?

    • @Nikelui@lemmy.world
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      285 days ago

      Because people don’t use discord for privacy. They use it for gaming, voice chat, communities and streaming.

      • @Nikelui is 100% right: a chat room may be private, but it’s not secure. Even in an encrypted room, every additional person you add reduces your security. I’m sure there’s some paper out there that studies this, and that the graph of # of members vs security is an inverse power ratio.

        If it’s a public chat, there is no security.

        However, with Matrix, if you run your own server and restrict access to your friends, at least you can be fairly certain your chat room isn’t being used to train an LLM, or to harvest information about you for advertising.

        • @BroBot9000@lemmy.world
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          45 days ago

          There is a difference between willing information that you put out there and data gathering that goes on without your consent.

          Public chats are not my concern. That’s information I’m putting out there willingly.

          Location data is something I don’t want anyone collecting without my consent.

          Why does Element need to know where I’m located? Why is that being gathered with my identifiers?

          • I don’t know. I don’t use Element; I wasn’t aware it requested location service access. I switched to FluffyChat ages ago; it only asks for notification.

            But that’s just for group chat. I’ve been using Jami lately, and it does ask for location access; that’s because it has a “share location” feature, that - if you use it - shows a little map with your location to the person you’re sharing with. Maybe Element has implemented something similar?

            • @BroBot9000@lemmy.world
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              4 days ago

              This is what shows up when I check Element. Every other Federated app that I use doesn’t collect any information. Voyager, Pixelfed, Peertube, Mastodon all come up with “No data collected”

              • Huh. I just checked Fluffy, and it asks for location, camera, and phone. I just denied it everything but notifications, so VOIP won’t work, but all I use it for is chat rooms anyway.

                In any case, it doesn’t look any better than Element, in that respect.

          • @zod000@lemmy.ml
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            35 days ago

            Are you specifically referring to the mobile client of Element? i wasn’t away of anything with the desktop client that has anything to do with location.

            • @BroBot9000@lemmy.world
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              4 days ago

              This is what shows up when I check Element. Every other Federated app that I use doesn’t collect any information. Voyager, Pixelfed, Peertube, Mastodon all come up with “No data collected”

              • @zod000@lemmy.ml
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                24 days ago

                I just looked in detail through their privacy policy, and it looks like if you use their “service” they are collecting quite a bit of data, certainly more than I would have expected. I only use stand alone, non-federated homeservers and I have everything disabled as far as telemetry, etc, but I think you’ve convinced me to keep an eye on the other clients. I last test drove several last year and all of them were either lacking features I needed or had issues.

    • @Link@rentadrunk.org
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      45 days ago

      Isn’t the data sharing optional? I’m pretty sure it asks you on first startup and you can decline.

    • @doodledup@lemmy.world
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      125 days ago

      I use Signal for private and personal messages. I use Discord solely for gaming and voicechat. A good alternative doesn’t need to be overly private (although that would be a bonus of course). It just needs to have a good UI and feature parity with Discord.

      • @BroBot9000@lemmy.world
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        65 days ago

        There is a difference between willing information that you put out there and data gathering that goes on without your consent.

        Location data is something I don’t want anyone collecting without my consent.

        Why does Element need to know where I’m located? Why is that being gathered with my identifiers?

    • @tofu@lemmy.nocturnal.garden
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      45 days ago

      Does it? On Android, it never asked me to grant location permission unless I try to share my location to another user. Similar with contacts and calendar, it’s working perfectly fine without them. Where exactly does it link those identifiers and with what?

      • @BroBot9000@lemmy.world
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        This is what shows up when I check Element. Every other Federated app that I use doesn’t collect any information. Voyager, Pixelfed, Peertube, Mastodon all come up with “No data collected”

        • @tofu@lemmy.nocturnal.garden
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          14 days ago

          Ah! I don’t know what exactly these mean, would be interesting to see what Element says what those mean. I don’t think Element actually adds these to your messages etc but I don’t know the protocol enough.

      • @BroBot9000@lemmy.world
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        13 days ago

        That’s bullshit.

        A) Privacy =/= anonymity

        B) They have usernames and the option to hide your number from searches for those interested.

        C) Signal has absolutely no way of accessing any of your information: https://signal.org/bigbrother/ They publish all their subpoenas and there is no information that are able to collect. It’s all encrypted.

        D) Phone numbers are an easy way onboard the normies and Meta addicts that don’t value privacy.

    • MrSpArkle
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      35 days ago

      Most of the discords I’m on never use screen share for anything.

    • Prinz Kasper
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      24 days ago

      TeamSpeak recently added screen share to their TS6 beta, however it currently only works on official servers provided by TeamSpeak; they have not yet released TS6 server software, only the client. To my understanding, they are thankfully still planning on releasing it though.

      • @wheeldawg@sh.itjust.works
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        13 days ago

        Damn TS3 was still kinda wet behind the ears and maybe even still in beta last time I played with it. I only used it for one group and I cut ties with them.

        I never even used it, I only know TS2 and it’s purplish, super basic ugly interface. (If anyone even remembers that- would’ve been back in mid to late 00s)

    • loiakdsf
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      45 days ago

      honestly that isnthe only thing that stopd me from going all in on teamspeak/mumble

      i just need a screen sharing solution (not necessarily built into those tools)

    • riquisimo
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      75 days ago

      What if you had OBS create a “camera” of your screen, and then use that through video chat?

    • enkers
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      5 days ago

      The problem is that performant screenshare (to multiple users) more or less requires infrastructure. That requires money, and it’s impossible to compete on price with services that have the VC-enshitification model.

      You can get around this in a few ways, but they’re all tradeoffs that are in some way or other worse than discord.

      • P2P - sacrifice latency, reliability
      • direct multi-stream - sacrifice PC performance and/or bitrate
      • paid infrastructure - sacrifice money
      • @foggenbooty@lemmy.world
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        265 days ago

        I think P2P is still the way to go. Sure it’s not perfect, but it’s simpler and by it’s very nature doesn’t require the infrastructure we know will be a problem.

        Plus, don’t forget screen sharing in discord isn’t very good as is (720p30) if you’re not a paid user.

  • katy ✨
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    244 days ago

    if discord is going public they don’t need my turbo sub anymore

    • @GaMEChld@lemmy.world
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      44 days ago

      Cancelled mine when they redesigned the mobile app anyway. I don’t want a different interface on mobile vs desktop. I want a unified experience, which was their original purpose.

  • @Kuvwert@lemm.ee
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    1265 days ago

    Ah this is so exciting!

    Discord ‘existing’ has held back development motivation on Foss Federated Communication alternatives.

    When they go public only good things will happen for projects like matrix :)

    I’m very excited!

    • @CosmicTurtle0@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      145 days ago

      I feel like matrix isn’t a one-to-one replacement. It’s a good slack replacement.

      I haven’t used matrix enough to know for sure but does it have the discord equivalent of servers?

      • @WhyJiffie@sh.itjust.works
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        175 days ago

        those are called spaces there. but there’s no flexible roles system. also no hop-on voice channels yet, but that’s a client feature so maybe that’s a bit different

    • Possibly linux
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      5 days ago

      Matrix is cool but it really suffers from complexity.

      The spec is a mess because they keep expanding it.

      • @BoxOfFeet@lemmy.world
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        34 days ago

        I still have my copy. I cannot believe that song is like, 18 years old now. It was such a staple of my college experience.

      • @waz@lemmy.world
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        44 days ago

        I am certainly not one of the younger folks and had never seen that before. That is awesome, thank you for sharing.

        • @Kit@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          44 days ago

          Oh man, Basshunter was huge in the chronically-online gamer space in the 2000s. His other songs are pretty good too.

          To put it in perspective, the fact that they’re gaming on laptops and LCD monitors was an enviable flex when his songs released.

      • EchoCranium
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        24 days ago

        Used to use Vent playing Eve Online 19 years ago. Worked great back then. Apparently it’s still around, but still no Linux support after all these years.

    • HarkMahlberg
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      395 days ago

      @Xanza@lemm.ee Among my friends, it replaced Facebook Messenger, Teamspeak, and Mumble instantly. It was fast and the voice quality was excellent. The appeal in 2017 was obvious. The bloat that it had tacked onto it since then is egregious.

      Don’t get me started on the “rewards”…

      • db0
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        24 days ago

        The bloat that it had tacked onto it since then is egregious.

        VCs gotta make back that ROI…

      • @Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        155 days ago

        Don’t forget free servers.
        On TS3 it was to either know a friend that rented/hosted it, rent/host it yourself or use a public server.

      • @Comtief@lemm.ee
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        Funny, I remember in 2017 the voice chat had mic issues all the time but now that works much better. But I suppose everything else got bloated…

    • @u_u@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      165 days ago

      It used to be fast and not full of useless bloat like what you see right now. The usual enshittification.

    • @acockworkorange@mander.xyz
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      305 days ago
      • persistent IRC style chat rooms
      • virtual “servers” to organize said chat rooms, manage privileges, control visibility
      • integration with bots for all sorts of things (moderation, user welcome, dice rollers, etc.)
      • integration with games/music players/etc (I don’t use it but it’s very popular)
      • privacy and moderation controls
      • client allows fine grained notification controls
      • voice, video, and screen casting simultaneously
      • “server” templates: use an existing server config (roles, permissions, rooms, etc.) when creating a new server.

      That’s just off the top of my head.

      It’s enshittifying, but the value proposition is still hard to beat. I’m really hoping Matrix catches up with the feature set soon.

    • @pixeltree@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      155 days ago

      Other voice chat programs were crap, discord was significantly better and more consistent. Simple as. It still has features way ahead of other services. The business side is shitty but it works without anyone needing to know anything with no troubleshooting.

  • @Ibuthyr@lemmy.wtf
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    11 day ago

    Not entirely related, but why do so many people use Discord? What’s the appeal? I only ever used it as a replacement vor teamspeak or ventrilo. And I honestly hate most online games.

    • @pathief@lemmy.world
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      11 day ago

      I’ve been using it for several years. I have a small server I use with my IRL friends and it works great.

      • Near 100% availabily
      • Nice sound quality
      • Supports multiple servers for your multiple interests
      • UI is amazing
      • Works fine on every platform
      • Screen sharing / streaming is easy
      • Cool to see what your friends are playing
      • Free plan is more than enough, you can pay for cosmetics or higher stream quality.
  • astro_ray
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    255 days ago

    What are your thoughts on xmpp? Recently I have come to like a lot and am pretty active with friends there.

    • @shortrounddev@lemmy.world
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      225 days ago

      There are people using xmpp? Last time I set up a server and tried using it with Pidgin, I couldn’t find a soul that used it

      • They’re out there. The Venn diagram of people still choosing IRC (as opposed to being forced to use it b/c that’s where the community is) is probably just a circle.

        I was a big XMPP user back in the day, but because of the lack of multi-device message syncing and the really shoddy state of encryption, I wandered away. Plus, using XML for the protocol really geeked me out. XML is a document format, and per the spec, to be well-formed it needs to have an open and matching close tag. Jabber hacked around this by making a sort of infinite document - you get the open tag, but never the close tag - and it just felt really icky.

        I understand a lot of these things have since been addressed. I don’t know if XMPP still uses that bastardized version of quasi-XML without a close tag. But other things have come along that I like more. About 6 months ago I started running a client on my desktop again, but like you, nobody I knew was still using it, and nobody new was advertising it as their connection info, so… yeah. After a few months, I stopped running the client.

        • Andres Salomon
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          65 days ago

          @sxan @shortrounddev jmp.chat uses XMPP, and it’s a very viable replacement for Google Voice (and generic SIP options like voip.ms), so that’s what got me back on the XMPP train. No one else other than my family is using it with me, though, but it’s still nice to have SMS, (encrypted & decentralized) family chat, and IRC (via biboumi bridge) in one desktop client.

          • I didn’t mean to suggest that it was. I meant that the kind of people who voluntarily choose IRC are the same sorts of people who would voluntarily choose to is XMPP. While IRC is older than XMPP, it’s still the 1:1 chat protocol for old technical people.

        • poVoq
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          35 days ago

          Xmpp is mostly used for private groups and 1:1 chat, so more of a WhatsApp than a Discord replacement.

          But you can find some public channels here: https://search.jabber.network/

          The issues you mentioned have been fixed, and XML was never an issue 😅

    • @crawancon@lemm.ee
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      45 days ago

      xmpp is still valid but the new kid on the block is activitypub. I don’t think I’ve ever hosted an xmpp server but to me it’s a better suited (mature, focused)protocol with plenty to offer that AP can’t yet.

      having said that, stillll no moderation on free networks.