Nexus Mods Sale Sparks Concern in Modding Community
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Well, there's still ModDB? (I don't use ModDB so I dunno if it's controversial or not)
wrote on last edited by [email protected]Idk if it's controversial, but I've always hated the layout of that site. It seemingly has not changed in decades, either, looking at it now.
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In a system where money is not a thing it would just be a creative passion project and run endlessly until it was no longer needed.
Great. Yes. Under some kind of egalitarian free-energy tech utopia such as you're describing, websites like Nexus mods would be even better. Sadly there are no such systems already operating for us to move to, and we do not yet have the technology to try creating a new one.
So any other political systems that are more real-world?
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This post did not contain any content.wrote on last edited by [email protected]
Could have been worse. My first initial on reading the title was that some enshitification factory like Fandom. com or Microsoft had bought it
edit: wait nevermind. Chosen apparently is a literal enshitification company
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Can things be fedirated and monetized so long as the monetization is put into maintenance & upkeep?
Nothing stopping you trying!
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They didn't say anything about a sale...?
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Would it be possible to build a fediverse modding platform? What would that look like?
What would you federate? Would you federate posts of each mod with a link back to the home instance. Would you federate the entire modfile.
I'm not sure activity pub is the right fit here. We would lose so many mods and it would make it much harder to find mods.
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Great. Yes. Under some kind of egalitarian free-energy tech utopia such as you're describing, websites like Nexus mods would be even better. Sadly there are no such systems already operating for us to move to, and we do not yet have the technology to try creating a new one.
So any other political systems that are more real-world?
You don't need full communism, just make sure companies are owned by the workers, suddenly they will have more money, free time, they will cut down the working hours, and that will help passion projects like these and many more.
There's no need for this aggresive exaggeration.
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You don't need full communism, just make sure companies are owned by the workers, suddenly they will have more money, free time, they will cut down the working hours, and that will help passion projects like these and many more.
There's no need for this aggresive exaggeration.
A collective can be a great way to run a company, for some cases. I lived with a girl who worked at a cafe that was run as a collective - it meant that people had a fair say in decisions that affected them. They could vote on their own wages, working conditions, and no one was barking out orders bossing them around. The owner was an old-school left-winger who was doing this out of pure idealism. He was still the one with the financial risk, he dealt with banks, ensured taxes were dealt with, and all the other tasks involved in running a business such as that.
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This post did not contain any content.wrote on last edited by [email protected]
So are they going to stop banning mods? Also we need more modding sites.
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That’s a good chunk of money for some internal moderator to have on hand. (Not that it was an all cash deal.)
Yep I was wrong. I edited
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I guess you still have the issue of someone needing to pay for the huge number of downloads, most of which are going to come from users who make no other contributions to the site. Maybe you could combine a fedi site with torrents or something?
Yeah this is a perfect use case for torrents, could go a step further and keep track of a downloader's ratio to stop people leaching.
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Can't even view r*ddit links anymore because they hate VPNs..
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Can't even view r*ddit links anymore because they hate VPNs..
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Would it be possible to build a fediverse modding platform? What would that look like?
Good luck hosting the terabytes of data that mods have.
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Ouch. Even selling it to Fandom would have been better than this.
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Can't even view r*ddit links anymore because they hate VPNs..
wrote on last edited by [email protected]Content of the Reddit post follows:
See the original post here. https://www.reddit.com/r/gaming/comments/1lcyjl6/nexus_mods_was_acquired_by_chosen_a_company/
People on Restera did some digging: https://www.resetera.com/threads/nexus-mods-site-has-been-sold.1219452/post-141554013
Site of the company itself: https://wearechosen.io/
Here is a monetization "cheat sheet" that the CEO posted on LinkedIn which is linked on Chosen's main page if you scroll down: https://i.imgur.com/ztjS4K7.jpeg
In the CEO's LinkedIn profile it says this:
Working closely with teams at NexusMods and beyond to build meaningful, sustainable experiences
If I had to guess the acquisition details are under some sort of NDA right now
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It's was a lateral move from one person inside Nexus to another moderator. It wasn't sold to some faceless corporation
Edit: fuck me I was was wrong:
https://www.reddit.com/r/skyrimmods/comments/1lcyzxz/nexus_mods_was_acquired_by_chosen_a_company/
Thank you for editing with corrected information when wrong!
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Welp, abandon ship.
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So are they going to stop banning mods? Also we need more modding sites.
wrote on last edited by [email protected]There are plenty, they just aren't as big or as well designed because they are just small forums, and most are usually game specific.
Nexus was unique in that it was a hub for the modding community, made specifically because people didn't want to have to browse hundreds of different forums to get their mods that may or may not be compatible with each other. It was a nice convenience while it lasted.