From what i can gather, it could be beneficial to, for example, have an instance which would become the main place to get videogame content on Lemmy. Most communities would be for specific games or AAA companies, but it could also have c/general for asking questions or topics which are non specific to any community, or c/meta, which would work as a place to discuss the state of the instance.

Overall, nothing that different from the actual status quo, but this way, we could consider instances as hubs for certain topics, which would then specialize with the /c/s within said instance. Instead of having 7 c/technology across instances, we could have @Tech.no and subdivide it into c/topic1, c/topic2, etc. (was supposed to come up with smthing but came empty handed shut up i dont browse that sub) .

What im mostly seeing here is that popular instances themselves are not different from reddit. The most popular instances on lemmy are beehaw.org and lemmy.ml, which have the same m.o, if you will, of reddit. Which is good, theyre popular for a reason, but in a way, theyre competing with each other. Not financially, but there will be overlap between certain /c/s.

Of course im not asking if its possible. Its just a matter of running the server and having the right infrastructure. My question is if you think its feasible to decentralize lemmy from the main instances, or even a good idea in the first place. Maybe you think its ok the way things currently are? Or maybe what i said is supposed to be the goal and im just late to the party? What are your thoughts?

  • @IndeterminateName@beehaw.org
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    1411 months ago

    Definitely think that content specific instances with more niche communities within them is the way forward. There’s no reason for lemmy.ml to have a raspberry pi community if computers.social has a raspberry pi community.

    • @gnoop@lemmy.ml
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      211 months ago

      So you’d have one Raspberry Pi community rather than every server creating their own? That would seem easier for some new users coming onboard.

      • @IndeterminateName@beehaw.org
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        11 months ago

        Yeah, there’d be nothing stopping other places having a Pi community but it makes more sense for a dedicated technology instance to run the main Pi community rather than having a dozen little ones.

        You could go even more niche and have a raspberry pi instance and then have Pi3, Pi4, Zero, software, hats communities within that.

  • @lazylion_ca@lemmy.ca
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    1211 months ago

    I think this will make sense for porn. Moderation of xxx subs has always been a challenge. With separate instances, if an instance is found to be hosting unacceptable material, the rest of the Lemmy network can simply blacklist that instance.

  • @creek@lemmy.ml
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    711 months ago

    I was thinking about this last night. I think this would be great for something like Television, Movies, Books, etc.

    You could have an instance like television.social (or whatever) and then create all the various communities from there. You could have a main community that serves as a place where general posts and discussion goes, and then create additional communities for individual shows.

    At the end of the day, there are no hard rules in place for this, so communal overlap will likely be something that we’ll have to deal with for the foreseeable future, but I do hope that we’ll see this convention adopted by more users as time goes on.

  • @ScarletCoconut@beehaw.org
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    511 months ago

    Instances meaningfully differ by moderating values and funding sources. Cross instance federated communities provide subject-specific themes.

  • Deebster
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    11 months ago

    Themed instances definitely make sense, but I suppose this needs to happen quickly, before one of the larger, general purpose instances makes the communities the instance would cover. Discoverability is definitely better on a larger instance, especially since the default setting seems to be to only show local communities (we need a snappier term than “communities”!).

    I’ve noticed a few instances set up designed for communities and not users, but it feels like that’s a difficult way to try to build a community. Something like mander.xyz seems like it’s got a better chance.

    Edit to mention that it’d be useful if you could “forward” users to the right place if they end up in an out of date (or typoed?) community. E.g. how in reddit you see CSS/a pinned post saying “you’re looking for x here”.

  • @mkhoury@lemmy.ca
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    111 months ago

    I agree. I think it would be even more powerful if we could ‘merge’ communities and their posts, so c/technology gathers posts from multiple instances that are federated from a user’s server

    • @TheAgeOfSuperboredom@lemmy.ca
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      311 months ago

      I was thinking about this as well but it gets complicated. Different instances may have very different communities with the same name. Should /c/news just be merged from a small local instance with /c/news on lemmy.ml? Some identical names may even be for completely unrelated topics. It was amusing to browse the Rust subreddit (for the programming language) and see so many posts from people wanting to talk about the video game called Rust. Maybe individual users can crate their own aggregates of instance communities. Browsing seems simple, but what’s the UI for posting? Do you have a selection for which instance you want to post to or does it default to your local instance?

      I really like the idea, but there’s a lot to consider.