Is it worthwhile to try to get mods to combine them? It just seems like a bit of a waste when trying to grow a community and its split in two.

Or is this what the fediverse is supposed to look like?

I read before somebody said that we might be able to combine similar communities at some point but don’t know if that’s true.

  • Mothra@mander.xyz
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    1 year ago

    this gets asked a lot. Yes, the whole point of this platform is to be decentralized. Nothing stops you, or anyone, from following 5 different communities on the same topic. The advantages are many. Basically each instance will be able to mod with/apply different rules to their communities, they will attract different crowds (even if they overlap a lot) and they will have a different style. If one goes down, which is likely in these platforms, or if say an instance cannot be sustained anymore, or if one of the instances defederates your instance, or whatever- not all is lost. You still have all the other communities to follow.

    there is a popular saying that goes, ‘‘don’t put all your eggs in the same basket’’.

    • FlayOtters@lemmy.fmhy.mlOP
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      1 year ago

      Apologies if this is a repeat question. I’m not entirely sure if there is a way to search in Jerboa for similar posts but I don’t think there.

      • Mothra@mander.xyz
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        1 year ago

        oh I didn’t mean it that way, no need to apologize. I just notice this question comes up a lot inside different communities, people often wonder why there are also two/three/N other communities and why don’t they all merge. It highlights a lot of people still expect things to be centralized even in a decentralized space. But, it’s good that you ask, so hopefully more people understand better why it’s good thing to avoid monopolies on topics.

      • Da_Boom@iusearchlinux.fyi
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        1 year ago

        The search function should function the same way as the search function on the official web interface. That means however, unless you’re searching the url of a specific community, it can only search for communities, comments and posts on instances it has cached. If it hasn’t had a member visit a community at least once, it won’t know it exists.

        I recommend browse.feddit.de to search for communities, and for newly created communities, you can search through the posts in [email protected]

        There are many other places to look, you can find multiple lists of communities that migrated from Reddit with a quick google search.

        • FlayOtters@lemmy.fmhy.mlOP
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          1 year ago

          Just saw that some apps do have a search function already. I’ve been using Jerboa and it doesn’t have one yet (for posts/comments that is).

          Thanks

    • Briongloid@aussie.zone
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      1 year ago

      My suggestion on GitHub was to let instance admin create a local /g/ grouping, with the freedom in how they utilise a /g/ group.

      Some people argued that they should be able to make it per account, like a multireddit, but the point was for new and general users having easier access to broader fediverse content.

      The instance admin would only need to do some legwork at first, then they could add to it as they go along. The barrier of entry for new users finding which communities outside of their instance is substantial.

    • Mane25@feddit.uk
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      1 year ago

      What would be the difference then between subscribing to, say, 10 different communities separately, or a group of 10 communities?

      • JoeCoT@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        If there are 5 different instances with the same community, to subscribe to all of them you have to go find them all.

        If kbin had a feature to combine them in groups like this, when you went to subscribe to one version of the community, it could let you subscribe to all of them at once. Without having to hunt them down.

  • HereToLurk@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I thought about that too, but I also can see a scenario where as the userbase grows, one instance’s community is seen as the “default”. I suppose the upside is that if something happens to one instance, there will be a backup of sorts on another instance - which in a way is sort one of the points of decentralisation.

    • TeamAssimilation@infosec.pub
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      Yes, that’s a risk, but it also gives communities the opportunity to migrate to a new server in case they get captured by hostile mods.

      For example, my government will have presidential elections next year, and it’s trying very hard to preemptively co-opt the corresponding subreddit with propaganda. If the sub had joined the protests and their mods removed, today it would likely be captured by government people. That won’t stop them, for example, from trying to offer money to some mods in exchange for preferential treatment, or even mod privileges, but here the competition means they won’t control the sole community with the country name.

  • supermurs@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    For me it doesn’t matter. I subscribe to all the communities that interest me, no matter which instance they are on.

    • Blóðbók@slrpnk.net
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      1 year ago

      I would say merging them doesn’t make much sense, but combining them (via some multi-sub entity a user can subscribe to) would be a nice way to organise and browse/filter your subscriptions.

  • [email protected]@infosec.pub
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    1 year ago

    The way I see it, the fediverse itself is the conversational arena, not any particular community within the fediverse. Communities limited to a single instance shouldn’t have primacy, because some of those instances don’t even want their communities open to certain other instances on the fediverse. Since some of the biggest communities keep defederating each other over petty moderator politics, it’s absolutely a good thing that the the fediverse has multiple communities for the same topic, or even with the same name. As long as you’re on an instance that doesn’t defederate other instances, you’ll see them all and can interact on them from a single account. More than that though, people wielding too much centralized power always turn out to be dicks, so anything that maintains decentralization of power is good.

  • (╯°□°)╯︵ ┻━┻@programming.dev
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    1 year ago

    That’s exactly what happened with reddit, I think it’s better to have more than one, worst case scenario you only sub to one and if it goes down there’s a quick alternative.

    Personally I sub to both and if an article repeats no big deal I just move on

    • FlayOtters@lemmy.fmhy.mlOP
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      1 year ago

      I think the type of communities you want to see affects how you look at the repetition aspect.

      I like to use the sports communities for news/discussion around the time an event is taking place. Following live speedy discussion doesn’t quite work as seamlessly on two different communities. You just kind of end up picking one community and post there.

  • QuestionMark@vlemmy.net
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    1 year ago

    I don’t think so. I mean, even if an instance with an important community has a problem (e.g. goes offline) we can simply create that community on another instance, but as long as there are no problems I think it’s better to have just one community.

  • Mewtwo@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    No, that defeats the purpose of the fediverse and its structure. This avoids power mods from taking over since they’re different instances. People can always cross post to the same community across different instances.

    • FlayOtters@lemmy.fmhy.mlOP
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      I think I need to learn how to crosspost in Jerboa.

      I don’t really get the point about power mods. Why would you not create the alternative community at the time the mod starts to becomes a problem?

      Isn’t creating an alternative community at the beginning when the mods are fine kind of unnecessary and just causing a split?

  • RightHandOfIkaros@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    This is how it is supposed to work, yes. However. i will say one suggestion going forward might be some sort of voluntary community sub-federating. The idea is that communities from different instances that are considered similar in topic enough to be under the same umbrella would federate or group with each other. A person who subscribes to one might see content from other communities that have voluntarily opted into this feature. It would connect the scattered communities of topics while also allowing these communities to “defederate” on their own from other communities of the same topic, in the event that malicious communities attempt to joing where they do not belong.

    This could also be given to the user, the ability for users to group their own subscriptions together, but this would put way more work on the end user and may not be as intuitive.

    For example, I am subscribed to one Silent Hill community, and I think I am the only member beside the mod, with no posts. It would be nice if I could see content from other Silent Hill communities in that feed.

  • Greg Clarke@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    I’ve been thinking about this. There are many up voted clickbait/ragebait articles on some of the popular news communities. I was considering creating a new community with specific rules about the quality of sources and non editorial titles instead of solely relying on votes. Please let me know if this already exists.

    Edit: [email protected] seems to be exactly what I was after

  • Mane25@feddit.uk
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    1 year ago

    Yes, it’s a great thing.

    In the old days of forums there were multiple forums for popular topics, so if you didn’t like one or didn’t agree with how it was moderated you had many more to choose from. It was usually friendly and you got to know all the regulars in a forum.

    Next we had centralisation which lead to massive forums, resentment built up against moderators, everyone was faceless and had no sense of community, and it all basically turned in to a competition for attention.

    Now we have decentralisation, we can have lots of manageable size communities again - it’s great.

    • SoNick@readit.buzz
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      @Mane25 Yeah, but it’s the pits for the smaller communities I used to use reddit for. The local-ish one had at most 300 people online at a time and most of them were lurkers. Split that into smaller groups and there isn’t enough critical mass in any one smaller group to make the communities work.

      @FlayOtters

      • Mane25@feddit.uk
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        It wasn’t a problem for forums, for smaller interests there’ll be fewer forums, it’ll sort itself out.