this post was submitted on 10 Jun 2023
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So, honestly, the only thing that concerns me is duplication of various "subreddits", for a lack of better term.
I searched for Technology, and I found two different ones. I know that's how the Fediverse works, but it may cause confusion and drive down user engagement
The user fragmentation is going to make it hard for communities to reach critical mass.
Explain Like I'm Five is a subreddit where niche experts come out of the woodwork to make the sub phenomenal. However, that doesn't work if those users are split over 100 different subs named the same thing on different servers.
I think the subs/communities need to automatically mirror or aggregate, but I'm not sure if that's practical with this platform topology.
I'm pretty sure that over time, some of them will naturally take off and attract more users than others.
This issue should be solved by the client apps and websites. (Third party or not) essentially the client should be able to search for all instances of a community and aggregate them together - a bit like a multireddit, except it's intelligently done with communities of the same name in different known instances Then you set which community from this group you want to post to by default (or it decides based on instance or popularity, or some other metric)