
How to use Lemmy: The fediverse connected social news aggregation and discussion platform similar to Reddit.

To discuss how to grow and manage communities / magazines on Lemmy, Mbin, Piefed and Sublinks
Resources:
Megathreads:
Rules:
Migration of instances closing down.
Hope this relates enough to the growing of the threadiverse and is not too technical for this comm. After the closure of .ee I was wondering if there is/was some movement to be able to migrate whole communities off an instance including all its posts. Having a great resource of human made information is the main reason to be using lemmy but the possibility of it vanishing is scary.
To my understanding the posts that are hosted on the op's instance and not the one closing down can be migrated by the actor of the community "boosting" (or whatever the activity pub term is) the posts again. And for the posts hosted on the instance closing down they could have a process similar to mastodon migration, of course on their own decision.
Was this discussed elsewhere?
Should "dog-piling" be discouraged, and if so, what would be the best way to do so?
Dog-piling is when someone expresses an opinion and people swarm in the comments telling the OC how wrong they are and how right they are. Typically the person getting dogpiled is downvoted into oblivion in the process. Note that I'm not talking about anything controversial in their opinion or the comment being trolling in any way; just any general disagreement with the groupthink.
Brief example:
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User 1: There are lots of factors at play here, not just money. There's X, Y, Z, and those are all independent from money. |____> User 2: No, it's money. It's always money |______> User 4: Right? How can anyone think it's anything *but* money? Some people! |____> User 3: Yes, well, X, Y, and Z wouldn't be a problem if not for capitalism, so it's definitely money, and you're wrong. |____> User 5: It all boils down to money; always does. |____> User 6: Of course it's money. Only a capitalist bootlicker would think otherwise. |____> User 7: Go back to Reddit, troll.
I would suggest to consolidate to the first one, open for discussion.
Content jacking/reposting is a problem on Lemmy.
Content jacking and top posting other people's content is really bad for Lemmy. It's also just being a dick to other people making content on the platform.
This pattern is very common on lemmy, and needs to stop.
This is often used to attack or force migrate conversations from a instance someone doesn't like to another instance they do like. It's offensive by its very nature.
If you want to make a better community, great, do it but not at the expense of other Lemmy posters.
Consolidating strategy video game communities
Post mostly spawned because whenever I see games that fit various video game genre communities, I try to post it there, and when I hit a strategy game I end up crossposting to lots of different places.
There are two general strategy communities, and some for more specific subgenres. I think it'd be nice to fold the subgenres into a bigger community for now just due to the smaller size of Lemmy so all the strategy fans can talk and see each others' posts instead of sectioned-off isolated folks screaming into the void, but I'm also not a big strategy game buff and I'd rather the people who play them more have a bigger say, hence this post. Besides, if subgenre fans tend to stick to that subgenre and don't bother too much with other things in the overall strategy genre, there is probably a good reason to keep them separate.
We have the big [email protected], allowing what seems to be anything in the strategy genre, with the last two pages of posts being mostly from @AgentKaryo@lemmy
WomensStuff has moved
Hey all! WomensStuff has moved from lazysoci.al to [email protected] We're a trans+ inclusive women only community for all things women including fashion, feminism and general female chat.
With lemm.ee closing, where should shittyaskscience go?
cross-posted from: https://sh.itjust.works/post/39495259
https://lemmyverse.net/communities?query=shittyaskscience
No duplicate community currently exists on another instance, so we have free range. Any suggestions?
Making a post for subscribers only and not all - (kinda)
Sometimes you want to make a post for a community but don't want to reach the ALL audience (niche or controversial communities). Here is a pseudo workaround to achieve this.
The post will appear in the community at the original creation time and not the undelete time. This avoids the bulk of people who browse all by new (since it will be buried 12 hours in the past). Subscribers will still see the post in their feed
Weird Federation Question with Banned user.
So we have A (aussie.zone) H (hackertalks.com) S (slrpnk.net) and D (dubvee.org)
Why Outreach Matters
TL;DR: Integrity, or instance identity, and outreach are both important to help federated online spaces to continue to exist.
This is meant as a kind of complementary piece to sabreW4K3's post, Why Integrity Matters (link to thread on their home instance).
I'm writing this as I don't entirely agree with, nor disagree with them, and want to provide another perspective.
Integrity, or as I see it, instance identity, does matter insofar as one wants to build a distinct community that anyone cares about. At the same time, online communities typically aren't self-sustaining in the same ways offline communities can be. Online communities benefit from both integrity and outreach to sustain themselves.
Lemm.ee going offline soon is as much an indicator of this as anything. Calls for additional admins to help offset burnout went unanswered, and while there are many reasons for this, one among those may be as simple as insufficient interest
Why Integrity Matters
Yesterday me and Blaze had a bit of a back and forth and upon review I had some thoughts.
Let me state first and foremost, I adore Blaze and his contributions to the threadiverse. I think he makes the threadiverse a better place with his presence alone.
That said, when we were arguing I had a few problems. But the biggest and most pertinent was that I felt he was chasing Redditors.
I can't speak for everyone, but I chose Lemmy. Since I got here, I have put my fair share into making this place everything I want it to be. Whether that's conducting myself properly or whether it's trying to engage or provide a platform for engagement.
One thing I really don't want Lemmy to be is Reddit. I engage on here far more than I ever did on Reddit. I have a perfectly curated timeline which is the perfect mix of news, entertainment, enlightenment and conversation. I want Lemmy to remain Lemmy.
Lemmy works for me and my mental health. The way Lemmy is set-up, I relish the fact that I can discuss
Getting Started on Lemmy
How to use Lemmy: The fediverse connected social news aggregation and discussion platform similar to Reddit.
Posted this over at [email protected] and it was suggested I put it here too.
I've been working on a guide to getting started on Lemmy. What do you think I should add?
LemVotes to identify suspicious activity for your communities
Original introduction - https://lemmy.world/post/28787892
https://blog.gregtech.eu/posts/lemvotes/
I think this is great tool to identify vote manipulation accounts.
Thanks @[email protected] for making me aware of this.
And thank you @[email protected] for developing it.
Just be aware it lists all downvotes first
Piefed comm for catgirls, and other critters
I made a piefed community for catgirls any other critters: [email protected]
How do you lock a community?
I am following the piefed guide on moving communities in order to move [email protected], but I can't figure how to lock the community?
One would think this would self evident, but I can't see anything in the UI.