This question is especially for people who have joined in the last week. Have you used other fediverse platforms or is this your first time really using one? What do you think of it so far? Are you aware that you can comment on Lemmy posts with a Mastodon account?

    •  Cralex   ( @Cralex@lemmy.one ) 
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      101 year ago

      This is my story as well. I follow a few accounts on Mastadon, but I find it much easier to connect with Lemmy. I joined Maston during the height of the Twitter crisis, and Lemmy earlier this week during the Reddit crisis.

    •  chaNcharge   ( @chaNcharge@beehaw.org ) 
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      1 year ago

      I was never really into the idea of twitter and I really only lurk on a couple of people’s twitter accounts but the idea of reddit is good for me because I can find a community of people who like similar things as me easily and see what’s been popular. It’s also a decent news feed on the side.

    • Same here. I signed up just to get an account/handle in case I end up being more interested in sharing a “reach me at this username” blah blah but I never signed up for Twitter based on its initial inception concept of “post every second of every day!!! Isn’t this great!?!?” No. It isn’t. It’s a stupid concept and I hated the mentality of posting on your Facebook wall every day… why would I want to do that constantly?

  •  dingus   ( @dingus@lemmy.world ) 
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    291 year ago

    First time user here. I have heard of Mastodon, but never attempted to use it. I always was under the impression that it was sort of a Twitter alternative, and I’ve never had any interest in Twitter, Instagram, etc.

  •  Evolone   ( @Evolone@lemmy.ml ) 
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    241 year ago

    Yes, it is. And I literally have no idea what I’m doing or what the fediverse is or how to best utilize it and I have a mastodon account but don’t use it because all of this fediverse/instance stuff stresses me out and I just want a cool community to feel like I’m a part of, not a bunch of stuff I don’t understand and I hope I can feel comfortable here with Lemmy. Oof.

    • Imagine there were multiple reddit websites. Reddit.com, reddit.org, reddit.social, etc. Doesn’t matter what account you have, you can see communities/subreddits across anyone of them.

      That’s Lemmy.

      When you make a lemmy account, it’s more like an email address. You are evolone@lemmy.ml, I am cosmicsploogedrizzle@lemmy.ml. Someone else is joeblow@beehaw.org. We can all chat and post and have a good time no matter what website/instance we post to.

      That’s how users work on lemmy. Just like email. Communities on lemmy work the exact same way as users.

      If all you’re interested in is that, then you can stop there and fully enjoy your time with lemmy as a reddit replacement.

      The future potential and complexity comes from the next part:

      The fediverse is someone said, "hey, you know how people on reddit can’t follow people on Twitter, or people on YouTube can’t subscribe to subreddits, or people on Instagram can’t leave YouTube comments? Well let’s make it so you can.

      Now this isn’t perfectly implemented at the moment, and there are a lot of growing pains (it’s kinda like the wild wild West), but you can make a mastodon account (like Twitter), and follow the this lemmy community !asklemmy@lemmy.ml on it, and you’ll see all the posts and all the comments that you would otherwise see on lemmy, just in a twitter-like format.

      It’s not perfect and compatibility across these decentealized apps is not perfectly impremented atm, but in the future you could theoretically have one giant interconnected web where everything from “Twitter” to “reddit” to “YouTube” to “Instagram” to whatever fediverse equivalent app are all interwoven. And if any instance of them gets a big enough head to pull something like reddit is pulling, or what Twitter has been pulling, the community can just make a new “email” on a different instance/website and continue as of nothing changed. No single website/instance can abuse their power, because another instance can be spun up any time.

        • Of course! Whoever runs the server bears the cost. How they pay for it is up to them and the community. Maybe you run your own instance and pay out if pocket. You’d be your own admin and can do whatever you want. Or you join lemmy.ml and maybe donate or sub to patreon, or you don’t pay anything. Maybe in the future some instances might make private deals to pin ads at the top in exchange for payment. It’s up to the server hoster. Right now it’s the wild wild West. If a server gets filled with ads and you don’t like it, you pick up shop and join a different server.

          What lemmy/the fediverse really needs is an account migration tool, so that if you want to set up shop elsewhere, you can export all your subscriptions and settings, etc and import it into a new profile on a new instance. That will come with time

      • I’m not sure I understand the last part correctly. As I understand it, if a community behaves in a way the users don’t like, we can just create a new community. The advantage of the federated nature is that it’s not as painful as finding for example a whole reddit or twitter alternative because of how modular the fediverse is, right?

        Edit: come to think of it, I have a second question and you seem to have this whole thing figured out. I’ve seen people say that they are on lemma as well as kbin to see which they like better ot which one grows better I guess. But does it really matter since the whole thing is interconnected anyways?

        Thanks :-)

        • Yes, somewhat. Communities are like subreddits. So yes, if a community is doing what people don’t like they can pick up and make a new community. A good example is on reddit r/gaming used to be more discussion and news focusedz but over time it became more popular and filled with memes. Some in the community didn’t like this so they made the r/games subreddit which is news and discussion focused.

          On lemmy, that new community can be made on the same instance or on a different instance.

          What I was getting at, was that in addition to this, if the communities on an instance dont like how an entire instance is being run, they can pick up shop and just move to a new instance. As a user you’ve have to make a new account on a new instance, but you’d be able to subscribe to all the same communities on the instances you like.

          To simplify: Instances are run by admins, communities by mods. On reddit your only option is to make a new subreddit and change your mods if you don’t like something, but you will always have u/spez as your admin. On lemmy, you can ditch your admins and set up shop with other admins.

          To answer your kbin vs lemmy question: The only reason you would pick one over the other would mostly be due to their layout and customization. Additionally, instances can block other instances, so you might like kbins layout, but maybe they block an instance that has a community that you like. Like. Conversely, kbin might have a cool community you want to subscribe to, but your specific lemmy instance is blocking it. So you can do what I said above, you pick up shop and you set up in an instance that doesn’t block the community you want to join. Alternatively, you can set up your own instance on your own server and then you can join anything you want, provided that you aren’t so toxic that other communities potentially block you lol.

          I have general helpful additional links in the bottom of my sidebar over on my community https://lemmy.ml/c/ps5 if you want to see how you can do some of what I said above.

    • I feel you. What’s cool though is to see the growth over the last few days. It’s nice that here are a lot of people sick and tired of these giant tech companies and their terrible behavior. I think treating it the way you’re describing is fine enough.

  •  johndoe   ( @johndoe@lemm.ee ) 
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    131 year ago

    Yes… just signed up. I had never heard of Fediverse until 3 days ago. I spent the past 2 days reading up on it and bam, here I am. I remember a lot of chatter about mastodon after Elon stuck his head up his ass but didn’t pay attention. I glad to see a lot of people here (smarter than me) are as confused as I am. This will be so fun to watch this evolve.

    •  r4tzt4r   ( @r4tzt4r@lemmy.ml ) 
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      1 year ago

      I think I will understand only what Jerboa makes easy to understand. I mean: there’s a search function so I look for things there. There’s a gaming community, so I suscribe. The frontpage or whatever show me posts from servers (?) I’m not subscribed to, so I will lurk there (like in this instance).

      I don’t know if I there’s another way to find communities or “sublemmies” or whatever. Basically I see, I comment, I post, and I hope to find things related to my hobbies.

  •  ikiru   ( @ikiru@lemmy.ml ) 
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    111 year ago

    This is my first time using Fediverse accounts but I’ve always stayed away from other social media other than reddit due to privacy reasons.

    I think Lemmy is cool but I will miss all the different communities and information I could find or did find on reddit, but I hope Lemmy grows into what reddit was and what it could have been.

    But, yes, I have to admit I am a little heartbroken after about a decade.

  •  elroon   ( @elroon@lemmy.one ) 
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    1 year ago

    Tried Mastodon after Twitter fiasco, seemed like an okay experience, but in the end, it lacked what’s most important about any such site: the people. A lot of people I followed on Twitter just didn’t make the transition (some did), so after a while of not really seeing content I was used to see, I drifted away.

    To be honest, I can imagine Lemmy could follow the same pattern (for me, personally, not in general). Even though it’s off to a good start after I already found /r/patientgamers alternative here. Now I would love some equivalent of /r/soccer and I think I could make Lemmy my new home.

  • I used mastadon a but but never got hooked. Not because of the app but because the Twitter like format is only good if you have interesting people to follow.

    I’ve always preferred the reddit style discussions.

  • Back when the switch from Twitter to Mastodon was recommended I tried it but didn’t really understand how it worked, didn’t know how to get to the content I wanted and gave up. This is the first time after that

  • This is my first dip into the fediverse.

    I have no interest in a personal page like twitter or facebook / meta, so no plans for mastadon as well.

    That said, can someone ELI5 the difference between Lemmy and Kbin?

    Is there a reference for all the fediverse places outside of those mentioned above?

    • The difference is only on who runs the instance, and what particular rules said instance has, like restricting submissions, or disabling downvotes or nsfw communities. That’s it. That’s why you can make an account on lemmy but still post and comment and suscribe in kbin communities.

      https://join-lemmy.org/instances this is a list of most but not all instances out there.

    • Kbin and Lemmy are software that you can run on a server to host a public (or private) instance. Kbin is newer and there aren’t a lot of servers hosting it, but I expect it to grow quickly.

      Lemmy is very similar to Reddit where you can post in a community (subreddit) and have threaded comments. You can subscribe to those communities and see the posts in one place.

      Kbin offers this same functionality, and because it works with the fediverse, you can use your Kbin account to join communities on Lemmy servers. In Kbin, these are called threads. Kbin also have a microblogging feature, like Matodon, so you can follow Mastodon users there in a Twitter-like format if you’re interested in that. Lastly, Kbin combines Threads and microblogging into “Magazines” about a specific topic, allowing people to interact in whichever format they like most.

  •  Gray   ( @Gray@lemmy.ca ) 
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    91 year ago

    I tried Mastodon and really didn’t care for it. It didn’t translate quite as cleanly into the decentralized structure I felt. If I wanted to look up a famous person I had to know their instance, which felt like a really messy structure. Still, I have hope for it’s future when they clean up a few of the less user friendly elements. Lemmy, I’ve loved. I think forums like this work way better in this decentralized way. Part of that comes from the fact that forums are anonymous anyways, unlike Twitter-esque social media platforms.