Some communities have pinned posts that explain their community in more detail, but I generally agree with you.
Fediverse
A community to talk about the Fediverse and all it's related services using ActivityPub (Mastodon, Lemmy, KBin, etc).
If you wanted to get help with moderating your own community then head over to [email protected]!
Rules
- Posts must be on topic.
- Be respectful of others.
- Cite the sources used for graphs and other statistics.
- Follow the general Lemmy.world rules.
Learn more at these websites: Join The Fediverse Wiki, Fediverse.info, Wikipedia Page, The Federation Info (Stats), FediDB (Stats), Sub Rehab (Reddit Migration), Search Lemmy
Cheers to that username.
not sure which I like more, the squares or @fucker
Your avatar gave me a seizure and I died.
That avatar really isn't cool for people with sensitivity to flashing images, please don't do that.
Your profile is hilarious 😂
That's what we did at [email protected]
Which is honestly not a spin-off of r/japaneselanguage because that subreddit was a complete mess. But so was r/learnjapanese. I don't get the optics of a Reddit spin-off because that's like tying your community to the expectations and behaviour of a previously community that could will be improved upon.
This was a problem on reddit too, and it looks like it’s carried over here. People make new communities and just assume that everyone in the future who finds it will just automatically know the purpose.
Way back on Olde Usenet in the 1990s, there was a whole voting process for creating new forums ("newsgroups"), where you had to get supporters to say they would actually use your new forum if you created it. Creating the new forum soc.women.lesbian-and-bi
required a whole democratic voting process, and it passed!
soc.women.lesbian-and-bi is a moderated newsgroup which passed its vote for creation by 458:56 as reported in news.announce.newgroups on 14 Aug 1995.
Alternately, you could create your new forum in the alt
space, where you just had to have an argument in alt.config
about creating the new forum.
Either way, the theory was that real news servers would only carry your forum if you won a vote and/or argument about it. The point of this was, supposedly, that cluttering-up the list of forums with a bunch that nobody was using would be a bad idea, so it would be valuable to show that people wanted a forum before creating it.
In practice, this depended on the ability & interest of news server admins to follow the democratic and/or anarchic processes for the creation of new groups.
I remember when rec.arts.disney split. There was the voting process whether to split as well as a vote to how it would split, if I remember correctly. I hadn't thought about that in years.
Alt was the free for all. I learned a lot on alt.atheism, including how threads devolve into chaos and when to walk away.
Thanks fubo, I feel super old now.
Hah! Better to learn from alt.callahans
than alt.religion.scientology
...
Who could forget alt.buddha.short.fat.guy and alt.swedish.chef.bork.bork.bork?
Agreed! I started a community a couple days ago and I also browsed through the descriptions of other communities to get an idea of what we should put in one (I have no experience moderating subreddits or anything like that) and I found that many had little to nothing in the sidebar.
In case this is of any use to you or others, here's what I've found to work well:
- Summary of what the community is about
- Community rules of conduct
- Links to related communities that offer similar content
- Some additional info/useful links that are related to the topic.
Good formatting also makes it look clean and professional.
Shameless plug: check these out
This is super helpful, thank you very much.
Did you have to do anything special to start one? I just tried and I keep getting an error: {"error":"rate_limit_error"} when I hit create.
It was actually easy to create it (I’m on lemm.ee instance) the hard part is I think just being able to maintain engagement.
Rules included would be good too. I don't know if I can post external links or discussion sometimes.
We do include rules in the lemdro.id communities. Unfortunately, many don't read the sidebar.
I agree. If they can't take the time to write anything in the sidebar or have a community image, I lose interest pretty quickly.
I was messing up with my community, added the description pretty early, just completed the whole shebang with rules, game season info, links,...
Yes, it's a continuation attampt of the reddit variant, as it looks like the other mods have left that sub as well. I'm still there, lurking, but it's dying after a vote to stay. The main contributers went silent there and moved to the community discord server.
I'm doing my best! This is my first time modding, and I'm not sure how to run a good community. Feel free to stop by any of my communities and suggest better sidebar content and I promise I'll update it.
I wouldn't know what "OL Reign" is, maybe you could add what sport that is. Altho I guess "FC" kinda gives it away.
But sports team is something I have no interest in so I'm adding these to my huuuuuuge block list of everything sports-related. Don't take it personally :p
Btw I'm also trying to get people to use the fanaticus.social instance that's apparently dedicated to sports. Or the country instances.
You might be able to make a [Meta] post in said community and ask for the sidebar to be expanded. Who knows, maybe it’ll work.
I've commented to a couple where e.g. there was a sticky of the mod asking what people want (but still no description), but sometimes I'm lazy and just want to browse :p
c/menopause is pretty much self-explantory
Exactly, clearly that’s a subreddit designed for cavemen to discuss their disdain for temporarily halting their music and videos. Me No Pause!
just like [email protected] is...
Tbh, I'm surprised that community is about trees. I was expecting an r/marijuanaenthusiasts situation.
Damnit! Because of you I'm now addicted to weed lol
Yeah its really weird. Instead they leave the default info about the server its on.
Those ones with words that i don't recognize - i usually assume it's a video game.
I usually assume it's an anime.
I'm pretty confident if people expect you to participate in their community they either want you to already know about it, or learn about it through osmosis by not telling you the insular gatekeeped references.
If it's something you should know and you're either young or just one of those rare things you've never encountered... You're on the internet dude. Use Google lol.
Fuck that I'ma just keep scrolling. If they want their community to grow they should at least put in the minimum effort of a description.