this post was submitted on 28 Jan 2024
200 points (92.4% liked)
Fediverse
28519 readers
353 users here now
A community to talk about the Fediverse and all it's related services using ActivityPub (Mastodon, Lemmy, KBin, etc).
If you wanted to get help with moderating your own community then head over to [email protected]!
Rules
- Posts must be on topic.
- Be respectful of others.
- Cite the sources used for graphs and other statistics.
- Follow the general Lemmy.world rules.
Learn more at these websites: Join The Fediverse Wiki, Fediverse.info, Wikipedia Page, The Federation Info (Stats), FediDB (Stats), Sub Rehab (Reddit Migration), Search Lemmy
founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
Lemmyverse.net show both communities: https://lemmyverse.net/communities?query=watchreddit
It probably didn't show up in the first place it only has 66 subscribers, and probably none on SJW.
About your second point, you indeed have to promote your community, using [email protected], or related communities. This works quite well usually.
I will add that in your case, people knew about your community as you posted in other communities, but as discussed then, people seemed happy with the existing Reddit-focused communities.
I definitely don't agree. I think this is very problematic. I rely on
all
to find new communities. I don't think onenewcommunities
sub is a valid replacement. It would suffer from the same issue -- people would have to spam their post to every single instances'snewcommunities
sub, which is ridiculous and not even viable.Relying on !all to have your newly created community to reach most of the people could work, but using the Scaled sort as it wouldn't have enough subscribers to push it using Hot or Active.
There is only one [email protected], it has 15k subscribers, seems like a pretty good way to promote it.
I'm not even subscribed to that, and even if I was, and it was a default subscription for every new lemmy.world user, I don't think it's a good replacement for a functional search or an
all
that includes all posts from federated instances. I see lots of posts onall-hot
with 0-5 upvotes so it seems fine if it actually showed all communities on federated instances (which it doesn't).There is a security issue by allowing automatic federation with any federated instance: an attacker could just create a huge number of communities, with a large number of posts, exhausting the resources of small instances.
That's what I guess it the main reason why it works like it does now: the server only gets the content if someone is interested.
Folks have given you a half dozen solutions here and your answer is consistently dismissive.
Did you want your problem solved or did you just want to bitch and argue?
I don't agree that they are solutions. The only proposed solutions are in the new github issue that someone created.
I want lemmy to be better. I want it to be a viable alternative to reddit so people will leave that site.
Most of us here do, but there is probably more benefit talking about Lemmy on Reddit that waiting for Lemmy to become perfect
I do encourage people on reddit to come here, but as another reddit mod recently said on lemmy, they're waiting for improvements on lemmy (like /r/toolbox, RES) before being able/willing to move over.
RES is here, at least for keyboard navigation
https://github.com/vmavromatis/Lemmy-keyboard-navigation
Keyboard nav is not a RES feature I've ever used. Tagging is a main one. As is subscribing to threads to be notified of new comments.
Hopefully those will come. Thread subscription would be nice indeed.
In the meantime, Lemmy is still usable, and I guess once Reddit will kill old.reddit, RES will stop working anyway.
i mean since you’re gonna be a twat about it, there’s an easy fucking solution: fork lemmy and adjust the federation to your liking.
if you’re not willing to do that, or any of the other workarounds in this thread, you’re just bitching to bitch.
Ah yes, very easy. Thanks for the suggestion.
But your solution would require every new instance to subscribe to every community in existence even if no users there care about certain ones. It's innefficient.
How would you know no one cares if no one can even see them...
"Inefficient" doesn't seem important since if there's no content/activity there then it doesn't use any resources.
I agree community discovery could be improved but let's say I had an instance with 200 users and none speak German. Would it make sense for my instance to still pull everything from the German language communities and clutter an All feed where no one can read it? Or is it better to wait for a German speaking user to register and actively choose to participate in those communities before federation begins?
I think the way federation works as a whole would have to be reworked for your solution. Simply federating with all communities not on your black list isn't the best solution.
Lemmy is pretty centralized in practice and people are on Lemmy.world, mostly.
It's like hotmail or gmail. Default choice.
10k, which is around 25% of the whole Lemmy: https://fedidb.org/software/lemmy
It's reasonable. Could be better, but could be worse (Gmail is probably much more prevalent in emails)
Yeah, the whole point of lemmy is to not be like that... so it definitely needs improvement.
The whole point of Redditors migration to Lemmy is to replace Reddit. You're absolutely free to deploy your own instance and develop your own fork or extensions to Lemmy's code so it works in a way you prefer on your terms.