this post was submitted on 10 Jun 2023
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Asklemmy

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I just don't get how Lemmy is going to act as a proper replacement for Reddit.

I understand the basic concept of Lemmy and the Fediverse, and people are touting the concept of it being federated and not centrally controlled, but it is an absolute mess and nobody seems to have an idea about what to do with it.

How are communities going to grow if there isn't at least some form of central management. Other than there being an underlying framework that connects the servers, they're all just doing what they want.

Outside of the underlying framework, there's no 'guidelines' or consistency. The servers have random names, and the main Lemmy.ml is telling people to register elsewhere.

How is this going to bring in a wider audience if people are being directed to lemmy.fmhy.ml, sopuli.xyz, or sh.itjust.works?

What is the purpose of the Fediverse when forums for niche interests already exist on the internet?

Does it make sense to have something like a 'sports' server that has communities for soccer, NFL, basketball, MMA? But then how do you get a consistent naming scheme that lets people know it's part of the fediverse?

Maybe Lemmy could work as a replacement, but it seems like it needs a 'flagship' server with a group of people maintaining it to set an example. Then other servers that cover more specific areas, such as sports, can be set up and potentially work closely with that flagship group.

If this doesn't happen, then I can't see how this doesn't just fizzle out.

P.S. I've also compared two different Lemmy servers and looked at the same post in a community, and there are different numbers of comments on each where they haven't synced up...

I also wanted to post this to the main Lemmy community, but as I had to register via a different server, I'm not able to access that community from the server I'm using for some reason...

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[โ€“] [email protected] 32 points 2 years ago (1 children)

Lemmy is not supposed to replace reddit. Lemmy is it's own thing that has already existed for years now. The benefit of Lemmy over individual forums is the interconnectivity of separate communities and being able to view content from multiple communities in one single feed. You can subscribe to communities and view all your subscribed community posts in one feed. Theres also the All sort on the main page, which essentially functions as Lemmy front page. Its also, as you said, not centrally controlled. So if one part fails the rest can continue as normal. That makes it pretty robust. But it isn't meant to replace reddit, a massive social media platform with millions of users.

[โ€“] [email protected] 3 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) (1 children)

That makes sense, it just seems that a lot of people are expecting Lemmy to replace Reddit, when it isn't up to that task and isn't what it's designed for.

If people want it to be close to Reddit, then I think a 'flagship' server is the only option, but it seems like even that is fitting a square peg into a round hole, and isn't something that anyone is taking responsibility for.

[โ€“] [email protected] 4 points 2 years ago

it just seems that a lot of people are expecting Lemmy to replace Reddit, when it isn't up to that task and isn't what it's designed for.

Exactly, and that's tally fine. Unsatisfied users will leave and content ones will remain.