To deal with server overloading, LiveJournal is going to implement limits on posts per user per day. The exact numbers are still under discussion, but it will be more for paid than for free users.

There's been a (predictable) huge amount of shouting in the news journal, which you ought to have on your friends list: http://www.livejournal.com/users/news/

(If I were running LiveJournal, I'd automatically put it on all new users' friends lists, so it was there unless people took it off on purpose.)

I got annoyed enough to type the text of the First Amendment to the US Constitution in a comment, in response to someone who seemed to think it was a violation of his rights that [livejournal.com profile] bradfitz isn't giving him unlimited services free. I also asked why he, personally, wasn't paying my ISP bill, and pointed out that the LJ code is open source. Yes, I can be a bitch.

From: [identity profile] papersky.livejournal.com


When I'm writing, I post little short updates when I'm taking a break. I haven't actually posted more than five, but having the limit there is inhibiting. It may make LJ significantly less useful to me. Or I may decide to pay, if I can figure out a sensible way to do it, but I do rather feel as if I've had the rug jerked out under me.

Yes, they totally have the right to do it, they're providing a free service, they can take it away if they feel like, I just feel they have taken something away and I'm a bit grumpy about it.

From: [identity profile] stealthpup.livejournal.com


I went looking for your comment, and finally found it on page 7 of 31. (Question: is there a simple means for searching for LJ-users' comments, as opposed to their journal entries?). I read through the responses, and then decided to check out his journal. (For those interested, it's [livejournal.com profile] ejrobbins.)

I was flabbergasted, both with the misrepresentation of those who'd responded to him, and then with the "I was just fuckin' with y'all!" USENET Excuse #47 For Poor Debating Skills. I'm still pondering on whether I should comment on his journal, but I'm leaning more toward the it's-be-a-waste-of-time POV. Part of me wants to be snarky, but that's exactly what he wants -- I've seen that "I'll post whatever I want, whether I believe it or not, and nothing anyone else has to say will ever touch me!" pose before, and it's simply boring.

<Forrest Gump>
And that's all I have to say about that.
</Forrest Gump>

From: [identity profile] almeda.livejournal.com


They've deliberately failed to implement functionality to hit someone's userinfo, frex, and say 'Show me all their comments.' It's a privacy issue; just think if you commented a lot in, say, BDSM journals, and didn't want some of the people on your friends list to know.

From: [identity profile] papersky.livejournal.com


No, I don't want to download and install stuff, I'm using Linux and it's a pain in the neck.

I'll probably just stop using LJ very much, just using it to read my Friends list and make non-anonymous comments. I've only been using it for a few months, I can manage perfectly well without if the way I want to use it isn't the way they want me to use it.

I had been planning to get a paid account, but now I feel steamrollered into getting one whether I want to or not, which makes me reluctant to.

I just came in from going to the bank, and I was going to post "went to bank, bought lifesaving tangerines" and didn't feel I should post such trivia if there are only 5 posts allowed in 24 hours, and if I'm feeling like that, I may as well not bother.

Why is it number of posts, as opposed to bandwidth? There are people posting huge pictures.
.

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