@Elizafox as someone that's used IRC for a decade and is an IRCop of a reasonably sized server
how can one take be this wrong
@KS @Elizafox Most people who I mention IRC to today either assume one of two things: corporate internal IRC which is well-insulated, well-managed from the public networks; or, Freenode.
OR, they'll say, "Eww, IRC? You should move to Slack." Hehehe.
I'm still waiting for my chance to throw up a Citadel BBS instance and use that for internal communications. It's a near perfect fit for that use-case, in my opinion. Oh well.
@Elizafox @KS No, those are the reasons why I left. People joining the ##Forth room who had severe egos and massive chips on their shoulders. And there wasn't a thing I could do about it. Couldn't kickban 'em, because they'd just log in with a new account, etc.
The frequent net-splits were entertaining at first, but eventually grew to be an annoyance. Logs would fill up, 3 pages of join/unjoin events followed by only 2 lines of useful discourse, then more pages of joins and unjoins.
@KS @Elizafox What the actual frig is this person talking about? IRC is literally the wild west of social interaction (there's a reason why I left it after years and years of being a regular on Freenode [old enough to have spoken to Lilo]). You can't *GET* more libertarian than IRC.
Regarding its claim to being healthier: maybe, maybe not. That's a deeply subjective attribute unless you're willing to define your metrics ahead of time AND get everyone to agree on them as being definitional.