I’m not the author, just sharing.

  • irelephant [he/him]@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    1 day ago

    answered with lists of theoretical protocol features instead of engaging with how the network actually operates

    I’m not just listing theoretical features, these are things that happen in the network right now. Is there anything I mentioned in my comment that I forgot to give an example for?

    Doesn’t matter whether migration is technically possible under ideal conditions because if you’ll need it they won’t be ideal.

    I don’t see why so many people say migration is only “technically” possible, migration can be done today. If there is more demand for third party servers, say, if Bluesky starts fucking up with moderation more, more third party servers will pop up, because right now the user concentration isn’t a technical problem or fault of the protocol. I don’t disagree that it’s a problem.

    And ATProto’s architecture, particularly the cost and complexity of running the more demanding components that need to have a global view of the network, structurally favors concentration at those layers.

    It’s not necessary to have a global view of the network to participate in the network.
    It is possible to have a global view of the network without a relay using constellation, constellation instances are very cheap to run, and work by indexing backlinks. It’s what powers reddwarf and recently wafrn (wafrn optionally supports relays as well).

    Atproto isn’t significantly more complicated than AP, it’s just different.