I’ll start:

  • Some significant portion of funds go towards development of the Lemmy software. 80%? Rest goes to lemmy instance hosting.
  • Ads are reasonable and non-intrusive (no popups etc)
  • People can still browse w/ an adblocker

I personally would gladly turn off my adblocker if I knew the ads were supporting development. Hell, I might even click a few!

    • Call me Lenny/Leni
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      12 years ago

      A website (at least those that end in dot com) are private property. It would be like recording footage of someone in your own home. All you need for that is basic transparency.

        • Call me Lenny/Leni
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          12 years ago

          I am talking about both legality and morality, but they both refer to different aspects of all of this. For my case, I go by morality, but that doesn’t mean certain aspects are necessarily illegal either. Selling info to a third party isn’t a necessary part of the equation and not a part of what I was saying when I implied “as long as it’s not deceptive”.

            • Call me Lenny/Leni
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              12 years ago

              At the same time, a website has no legal or moral obligation to be of service to anyone.

                • Call me Lenny/Leni
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                  12 years ago

                  When you use a website, they have the option to turn it into an agreement. If this is employed in such a way that it follows how agreements should work, none of this would be an issue. That isn’t random. Have you never heard the adage “property is nine tenths of the law”?