Wayland and audio is fixed, but only on the canary branch for the moment, this isnt lazy either, they changed the whole screenshare flow to suit linux's permission prompts
Well, "nice" to have that feature, but you still shouldn't use Discord, or at least limit your time on it as much as possible.
Remember, when you use it, you're part of the network effect that makes Discord big. You have to resist that. Take a look how Discord compares to pretty much any other messenger or communication tool in existence: https://www.messenger-matrix.de/messenger-matrix-en.html
Avoid it whenever possible, get your friends to leave it and weaken its network effect.
So, some of the drawbacks (there's probably more):
Discord has weak security (see URL above)
Discord has non-existent privacy
Discord has an incredibly vague privacy policy which means they do what they want. Even companies with strong privacy policies screw users over routinely. Guess what companies do who don't even care about good privacy policies. They even weakened it further a while back because they need to train their new AI features on your data as well, and probably even their weak privacy policies were in the way before. Well, good thing that the users agreed that they can change it at any time for any reason and be fine with it.
You grant all rights of everything you write, say, share or do on Discord to Discord, and everything you type, say, upload or share is being processed by their servers
Discord tracks what you're typing before sending it
Discord suspended accounts and required even more user data for "verification", such as telephone numbers which is completely unnecessary except for tracking and data selling purposes
Discord shares chat logs with law enforcement (and they can share everything because they're collecting everything)
The Discord client app tracks what programs you have running so it can for example display what games you're currently running. That means it contains a process logger. It has to scan every running application and then finds games out of those, and then you have to hope that only the game-specific bits are uploaded to their servers. Maybe that is the case, but can you trust them, and also to never change that? No.
If you have to use it:
Never use their desktop app, always use the web version from a secondary browser (web apps running in the browser have much less rights than locally running applications), and even then limit what the site can access to the least amount of stuff necessary. If you never use your mic or camera then block it in the browser settings. Don't trust Discord's own mute setting (this also applies to other proprietary software).
Use a fake e-mail alias / telephone number when creating your account, generally give them the least amount of data possible. Opt out of any options or features which are tied to you exposing more data to them
Don't give them additional money e.g. for their premium stuff (you already pay with data they gather from you)
Block at least these API endpoints which are purely used for tracking purposes (there may be more though, and they might change) [easy to do with uBlock Origin for example]:
Been using matrix since forever :) But the dissing of shitty corporate centralized applications is necessary because way too many naive users still give their data away for convenience.
I've been using that for ages to share my screen, but it doesn't bring over the audio which can be annoying, but otherwise works great. I am sure there are ways to get the audio into it, but it felt like it would be more trouble than it was worth.
I just wish there was a FOSS version of Discord.
I haven't looked too deeply into existing alternatives, but I have a feeling they all miss features Discord has and are just not as good.
wayland global keybinds are not really ready yet, they're only properly implemented in one desktop, so i don't blame the discord devs for not adding them.
Aside from it being a main way that I spend time with friends, it's good to see mainstream products spend effort supporting Linux as a viable gaming platform. I have friends who haven't made the jump to Linux yet, but giving up core discord functionality was simply a dealbreaker for them.
Screen sharing is a big social thing for my friends and I, lacking this functionality would mean I wouldn't be able to interact as much sharing goofy game moments and watching movies together.
I tried Vencord for a while, but my friends said that the quality of the stream on their end was consistently stuttering, an issue which isn't happening for me in the official client, so the release of screen sharing on Discord stable after working so well on canary is a welcome update for me.
For those of us not using Wayland, any idea if this still applies? Waiting on my flatpak version to support audio sharing with screen share... And please performance improvements.
What about video acceleration though? Cause last time i tried it as soon as I moved the camera the screen share's framerate would drop like crazy making it essentially useless. On AMD anyway
Idk brah I managed to make 3/5 friends switch to it and we almost exclusively use that to chat, and now got 2-3 family members to use it when talking to me too