I was wondering whether that could cause issues for the limited servers available, like when the mass migration from reddit happened. Would it be bad to add more accounts that would be mostly dormant? And if one does create a throwaway would it be better to delete the account afterwards.
If it’s to protect your identity from some embarrassing content you’re afraid of tying with your main account then it’s fine.
If it’s to skirt the rules of a community or instance then you’re just pushing the instance admins into making it harder for everyone to make throwaway accounts in the future.
…
My stance is if a service is totally cool with 1000+ bots, you making 2-3 accounts a year isn’t a problem.
The root issue isn’t quantity of accounts, but malicious users causing trouble.
It would add extra length to the queues for instances that manually approve new users.
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An NSFW alt probably would be the only exception here IMO
Alts aren’t throwaway accounts though
Disclaimer: I am not a Lemmy dev.
It would add some extra rows to a database, which can increase lookup times if enough people do it with enough accounts… so from a general engineering perspective, I wouldn’t encourage it.
In a more realistic sense, it would take a lot of people and/or a lot of throwaways to effect much difference. That is, assuming the database queries aren’t too complex or inefficient, and the servers aren’t nearing critical capacity.
Tl;dr It would be polite of you to keep only a couple of throwaway accounts, but I wouldn’t feel too guilty about making them. Just don’t be like a spam bot and create dozens or more.
Depending on implementation, the lookup should be indexed so the time difference would be very minimal on even large tables.
The cutest of storage could be a problem depending on how many wasted accounts exist, but even that should require a ton of accounts to make an impact.
Yeah, there’s always room for a lot of implementation-dependent possibilities of good DB practices, but it’s also possible for one mistaken PR approval to create exponential load.
In the case of FOSS where there might be fewer formal processes to catch errors, I like to err more heavily on the side of caution. If for no other reason than preventing surprise server scaling bills for the volunteer admins.
Also: if you are making throwaways, please consider donating time and/or cash to those instances.
I like that.
Only if you use them to do shitty things.
FARTYSHARTBLAST is right
TacoButtPlug is right too.
You’re alright, FARTYSHARTBLAST.
Ok TacoButtPlug
I think that the impact is rather small. The major issue is actual usage; a dormant account won’t tell the server “please fetch me those resources”, or “please send this comment”, or stuff like this, it’ll be at most a new line in a user database.
Don’t stress about it. A few extra accounts won’t make any difference. If 1000 people each make 1000 accounts, then you’re starting to have a problem.
I imagine if it becomes an issue for the hosts of the account, they can just delete abandoned accounts, or accounts that havent interacted in some time.
I have an account in ml and another in lemmyworld. I like ml much more, but created the lemmyworld one when ml was having down times.
Yeah, that seems like a good solution.
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what if I just seem like a throwaway?
I don’t think it’d cost the server much storage or computing power, but it would probably mess up an application queue. Also hopefully the instance does inactive account purges every so often.
Dormant accounts are dumb period, but that’s not going to stop anybody.
Not really inherently either, it depends on what you do with them IMO.
What type of behavior do you intend to engage in on your alt, and why wouldn’t you want that behavior associated with your main?
Worst undercover cop ever?
Don’t feed the assumer. Please.
Cops don’t care about cowards and their embarrassing behavior, son.
cop confirmed lol
I can bearly see, I forgot my sunglasses
This isn’t a throwaway account per se but I do have another account on lemmy.ml for interacting with other communities. This account (and this instance) is focused on free software and free culture advocacy. It’s not really about embarrassing behavior, but more about compartmentalizing interests.
A valid use for a throwaway would be to ask a sensitive question that you don’t want to be traced back to any of your main identities. This would be a question that is asked once, answered once, and never revisited again. There would be no need for it to be associated with any of my identities.