The title, really.

On Reddit, I was one of the ubiquitous lurkers. I’d like to maybe participate a little more on Lemmy, now that I’m here. I might even like to start a community, but I’m concerned about what kind of a commitment I might be getting myself into. I really have quite enough BS in my life without inviting more.

I’d be grateful for any advice, experience, or warnings folks might have. Thanks, and have a good one!

Edit: Thanks everyone for your responses! Maybe I will try my hand at a community or two!

  • At the moment almost zero. If it gets very active and you want to enforce rules like no reposting or something like that it could be a tiny bit. Mean users etc will also be managed by the server.

  •  Brayd   ( @brayd@feddit.de ) 
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    1111 months ago

    I guess it’ll depend on the size of the community you create. There maybe will some time in the future where it’ll take you some time to moderate the community. But I guess that if the community gets as large as this and you don’t want to invest that much time you can look for people who’ll help you with the moderation.

  •  comfy   ( @comfy@lemmy.ml ) 
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    11 months ago

    Yes, if you create a community, you are responsible for helping it grow. This includes things like writing a useful sidebar and adding an icon image.

    The good news is, you can (and usually should) ask for help and recruit moderators to help you with this.

  • I also have a lot of questions regarding how same communities on different servers would look like. There are already 2 c/technology communities. Are they totally seprate or the data is synced between the two?

    •  gun   ( @gun@lemmy.ml ) 
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      1211 months ago

      If they are both on different instances, then they are separate communities which allows for different moderation rules. That means no mods can monopolize a simple community name like technology. It would be cool if there was a way to sync them though.

            • this would be the best way. having then separate is a fundamental thing of the federation. being able to visually put them together should be on the user level.

              there should be a clear notice for which comm your new posts default to. likely the instance you’re actually on, but it’s possible that you don’t even want to join the comm for your own instance

      • No, infact sync would make the moderation system useless. I think there is going to be both advantages and disadvantages with this approach. One big disadvantage is differentiating the communities because users would be expected to check the server name.

        • Okay I wouldn’t say useless. For instance, say that a user posts a comment that breaks one servers rules but not the other. Then it would be banned only on the server whose rules it broke. If it was a user of that server, they’d be warned or banned. If not, it’s still possible to ban that users posts from showing up on a synced instance. Still, wouldn’t recommend it.

        •  gun   ( @gun@lemmy.ml ) 
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          411 months ago

          That’s not what I’m talking about though. Another user mentioned multireddits. If there are multiple technology communities on different instances you might want to subscribe to content from all of them with a single action, even if the content is moderated separately in each of them.