Heh, apparently I got 12 invites for private messages on Matrix a day or 2 ago. It's the same account inviting me 12 times, which was not possible to condense to a single request, for reasons.

Luckily, Matrix is blazing fast, so rejecting an invite only takes about 10 seconds. And you need to reject them individually, of course.

Then you notice that these invites aren't disappearing, even though I clicked "Reject", I got a spinner for about 10 seconds, and the screen changed to the room I was in before checking out the invite.

I want to like Matrix, but quality software is so low on their priorities that it's ridiculously hard to do so. Suggesting it to a friend is completely out of the question.
@anornymorse I've rejected private chat invites before (which I don't think is a great feature to begin with), so I know it should work. It just... doesn't for these 12 invites. I see a request being sent to the server, which shows no errors, and it only takes a measly 12 fucking seconds to get a response.
@tyil ...and this is an @matrix.org account you're working with, correct?
@tyil So, you're completely unaware of how this "federation" thing works, and that you should probably not create a new account on the most popular/centralized/overloaded server, then condemn the entire protocol for your mistake of centralization?

Because that's how it sounds.
@anornymorse I am aware. I happen to also host the Pleroma instance I'm posting from.

I know the Matrix team blames the users for using the service instead of fixing their problems, yes. This is by no means a new account, though. I've had it for years. Even if it were, it is absolutely retarded to keep registration open for all, and then blame the users for registering. Especially since not a single Matrix room is as active as the average IRC channel I'm in, and I seem to have a great response time there, and they're on way less (financial) resources. Clearly, it is very possible to make a chat system that's fast when there's over a hundred users. Only Matrix seems to fail this incredibly low bar.

Lastly not blaming the protocol for "the mistake of centralization". I'm complaining about a bug that doesn't let me use a feature they make me use, in this case, invites for a private conversation. Nice evasion of the problem, though. This is why nobody takes the Matrix people seriously.
@tyil That's a whole lot of words just to cover up for the fact that I was correct twice.

Go make an account on another matrix instance, watch your problems disappear for multiple reasons.
@anornymorse @tyil A new instance doesn't magically solve all problems. I did run an instance myself on decent hardware and still had problems. You could doubt my abilities to administrate my own server but even the matrix team has always problems. I mean they even had to abandon their main channel once because it was "corrupted".

How should Matrix improve if nobody acknowledges that problems exists?
@interru @tyil Your anecdotal assertion without evidence or application to an issue solved by federation is noted. Thanks for your contribution to the conversation.
@anornymorse @interru If the problem is solved by federation, and Matrix is a federated protocol, how am I still encountering the problem? Now I'm starting to wonder if you actually know what federation is.
@tyil @interru
> Everyone being on the same matrix.org server is totally federation!
You're neat. You make me laugh.
@anornymorse @interru So you're saying Matrix is not a federated protocol, and matrix.org is currently not federating with any other servers?

@tyil I thought the problems with Matrix were with Synapse and not necessarily the protocol itself. @interru @anornymorse

@terryenglish @interru @anornymorse I haven't done much research, but it mostly seems to be an atrocious implementation. The problem is that its being defended, and everyone pointing out the *very* obvious issues is being shouted at for daring to point it out. I *think* it is possible to have a better implementation of the current protocol without all the glaring problems.

@tyil I hope that can be done sooner rather than later as it yields ground to garbage proprietary chat/voip software. @interru @anornymorse

@terryenglish @interru @anornymorse I think it's already too late. I've had a reasonable number of friends try it out because the idea isn't too bad, and *all of them* have given up on it. Issues are being ignored or they are being blamed for using an instance that has other users on it. The performance is absolutely atrocious (over 20 seconds to join a private room), and that's even on small (20-ish) nodes). There's many problems, and the community seems hellbent on ignoring all of them. They've had plenty of time to at least try and fix some of the mess, but they just chose not to.

Oh, and the service touting "secure" on their homepage had an unknown attacker sit on their infra for a while, stealing ssh keys while nobody noticed. They only stopped it after he came out publicly telling them they've got some serious issues with security. That entire ordeal was handled laughably bad. I believe that was the final straw for the Rizon team to just take down their bridge.

@tyil I hope not. Federated communication is a wonderful idea. We just need server software that isn't complete garbage. Once we have that the rest will be easy as there's already decent clients. @interru @anornymorse

@terryenglish @interru @anornymorse We already have federated chat protocols. I honestly more hope in improving IRC or XMPP than Matrix ever taking off. They'd first need to solve this massive issue that is their community, and those are neigh impossible to solve.
@tyil @terryenglish @interru
Hey, does anyone reading this still *not* think that this was a premeditated attack on Matrix using a lack of information spread as fact? It's a pretty bald-faced smear-job at this point.
@anornymorse @interru @terryenglish @tyil no I use lain's. among other problems, I have a room invite for years that cannot be accepted or rejected.

@moonman Isn't Matrix still pretty new? I dunno maybe it just needs more attention from developers make better implementations of the server software. @anornymorse @tyil @interru

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@moonman Meanwhile the normies are all switching to Microsoft Teams, Facebook messenger or something else proprietary. 😩 @anornymorse @tyil @interru

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