this post was submitted on 30 Jun 2023
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General Discussion
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This is a community for general discussion where you can get your bearings in the fediverse. Discuss topics & ask questions that don't seem to fit in any other community, or don't have an active community yet.
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I've been using "forum" as a generic word to refer to any of β
In all these cases, a forum has similar attributes:
This is pretty generic. So what isn't a forum in this sense?
A Twitter hashtag isn't a forum. Although it can be used to find posts, and users can follow it, it does not have its own moderation team or policies.
A Gmail account isn't a forum. It receives messages. It has its own "moderator": you, the account owner, can delete messages from your inbox without needing to go through Gmail's admins. It can have its own "policies": you can write spam-filtering rules. But other people can't subscribe to it.
A blog without comments isn't a forum. It is a container for posts, and users can subscribe to it (e.g. via RSS, or just bookmarking), but it doesn't have moderation or policies because there's nothing to moderate: the blogger is the only one posting there.
That's a very reasonable and methodic conclusion. The only thing I don't like about it is that if you say it outside of the lemmy space it lacks direction. Someone can say "subreddit" anywhere outside of reddit and anyone will either know what a subreddit is, or be able to find out. Talking about a '[name] forum' the listener might wonder "which forum, where is it?". Even if they know about lemmy.world they might need to ask to be sure that it's the lemmy forum with that name, that is being referred to. In part because many other forums still exist outside of that space.
I'd say that "subreddit" is a brand name for "forum hosted on the Reddit service". I don't just mean in the legal sense β as you say, it tells you what service to find the forum on.
There isn't a brand name for forums hosted on Lemmy; the local term being the generic "community" kind of ensures that. The compatibility between Lemmy and Kbin also means that I'm noticing the use of "Lemmy community or Kbin magazine" as an awkward generic phrase.
"Fediverse forum" or "ActivityPub forum" use what are likely even less-familiar service names.
So, I don't know there's a good answer yet!
You are overcomplicsting this. If we said "reddit forum" before, that's just as understandable as "Lemmy forum".
And if someone knows what "subreddit" is then they are necessarily already aware of Reddit, so why wouldn't the same assumption apply to Lemmings, too?