this post was submitted on 22 Jun 2023
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Is this now widely acknowledged as a problem? I don't see a problem with that kind of fragmentation tbh. Especially since there was fragmentation of that kind in reddit too Maybe Lemmy/kbin just need a reliable way to search across instances.
If I was mostly staying on the home page, looking at the aggregate feed, I wouldn't care. But since I tend to browse by community, I see it as a big problem actually.
Maybe I'm misunderstanding, but I definitely don't think it's a problem. If we start merging similar communities and centralising everything... Doesn't that just end up defeating the whole point of the fediverse and recreating Reddit instead?
If I understand correctly, the issue is /c/sysadmin is different from /m/sysadmin (just example subs), creating overlap communities for the same thing. So if someone's doing an AMA they might be using /c/AMA, but other users would be trying to find it in /m/AMA and not understand why it's missing.
My opinion is, if we want Lemmy to take off and be a replacement for Reddit, it needs to be user friendly for the non-tech savvy users as well without having to explain how it works in a 3 page essay. Consolidating those communities across instances would help with that a lot.
I get that, and it does totally make sense -- the main issue I have is viewing this as a strict "replacement" for Reddit. I believe we should be more comfortable with moving and "replacing" Reddit with something more like an alternative than a direct copy; Reddit fell apart for a lot of reasons, but we can at least point at one thing to change; centralisation.
I think we shouldn't replace like for like, but move on and find new things; whether that's Lemmy, or other alternatives. Some people prefer centralised forums, some people prefer more niche communities -- for me, personally, I like more niche communities -- but I think there's a way for us all to be happy without sacrificing the fediverse ideals.
I'd say it's the opposite. I generally browse by topic (for instance,
fediverse
) instead of staying on the front page. So, as things stand, I just pick the largest community on the topic, and participate in that one. This naturally leads to centralization. If instead, I could "merge" multiple communities, then I'd easily participate in all of them.To clarify, I want there to be multiple separate communities on the same topic, with potentially separate moderation and rules, etc. I just want to see them on the same feed (kinda like the front page, but topic-specific; also, it would be nice if it was auto-generated when I subscribe to communities of the same name).
Ahhh that makes sense! I agree that being able to aggregate multiple communities into a feed would be really handy!
There are a bunch of posts about it: https://lemmy.world/post/228220 https://lemmy.world/post/211661 https://lemmy.world/post/102285 https://lemmy.world/post/159729 https://lemmy.world/post/75670 https://lemmy.world/post/43452 https://lemmy.world/post/37654 https://lemmy.world/post/194184 https://lemmy.world/post/142025
There's even an issue thread about it on Github: https://github.com/LemmyNet/lemmy-ui/issues/1113