this post was submitted on 13 Jun 2023
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Perhaps an easy way to describe the federation to someone is that, rather than just one reddit with lots of subreddits, it's a bunch of reddits with lots of their own subreddits. You only have to join one of the reddits because from there you can subscribe to any subreddit you want across the whole spectrum the reddits. If you were subscribed to r/gaming before, now you can subscribe to r/gaming@reddit1, r/gaming@reddit2, r/gaming@reddit4, etc (you might want to skip r/gaming@reddit3 cause they're just a bit too authoritarian for you or something). And if your chosen Reddit's moderator ends up being a u/spez about everything and you don't want to support that site anymore, you have the freedom to just skip out to a different reddit without losing access to subs.
One thing that’s not quite clear to me is whether these individual gaming “subreddits” would effectively work as one to the subscribers or not.
I.e.: YeeAyy, the large game publisher, announces a new hotly anticipated instalment in a popular series, each /r/[email protected] would probably have a post about it. Would I, as a subscriber to each, see X amount of duplicate posts?
Isn’t this the same if you do it on Reddit? I’m already seeing multiple duplicated posts on Reddit
Now it seems the problem is compounded because we're gonna have reposts across different related communities which will then be duplicated onto every instance/server. I'm also wondering how this will affect SEO and long term documenting of the internet. When I do a Google search for something, what will it return?
I'll give it to Reddit, nearly anytime I needed to search on how to do or fix something, those first 2 or 3 Reddit links almost always solved my problem or told me what I needed to know. Not sure how relevant or diverse the returned searches will be with kbin's system.