Matrix has a scaling issue at the moment. And even basic moderation tools are non-existent. Great for small groups, unusable for larger communities.
Not really
Matrix works fine with thousands of users. Even if it didn’t there are still lots of alternatives. IRC is like the bottom of the barrel.
To newer, younger contributors IRC could feel ancient or cumbersome to learn.
Not only yong contributors…
Also, if they’re mulling departing from IRC, how about getting rid of mailing lists?
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Unlike IRC, which is a centralised protocol relying on individual servers, Matrix is federated. It lets users on different servers to communicate without friction. Plus, Matrix features encryption, message history, media support, and so, meeting modern expectations.
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IRC is about as basic as you get usage wise
And that is precisely the problem. The majority of people you get are those who like absolute basics and that for sure is not the majority. It makes it more exclusive.
you want contributors to be somewhat serious about a project and not just hanging out at ones as it meets their fancy
IMO, you want people to be passionate about your project. Treating a project a job isn’t going to attract more people, but less.
Frankly, IRC and mailinglists epitomise the toxic and exclusive nerd culture that linux is known for and still has trouble shaking. “No, I don’t want more users, eternal september”, “RTFM noob”, “no, I will not adapt, you adapt”, etc. . Not all change is good, but the same goes for “but it’s always been done this way”.
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what would you choose to replace mailing lists with? e-mail is accessible, easy to archive, and archives are also accessible and easily searched
genuinely curious
fediverse groups, of course that would require structuring the software in a way that resembles mailing lists instead of reddit