
After this sub was "accidentally" banned 2 days ago there's been a lot of discussion about the future of the sub. Whether it was an accident to...

This is a place to share resources and coordinate projects to assist in the migration away from legacy social media.
Community has moved to - [email protected]
Due to how silent the mod usually is, blaze, earthman and I created a new community: [email protected]!
@[email protected] if you'd like, we'll add you as a mod if you want. See you all there! π
/r/Transgender_Surgeries discuss the future of their sub, someone suggests Lemmy as an alternative
After this sub was "accidentally" banned 2 days ago there's been a lot of discussion about the future of the sub. Whether it was an accident to...
Suggestion on /r/bannedbooks to create a Lemmy backup community
Given recent Reddit developments, such as: Subreddit takedowns, partnership with Google, Data Mining, active censorship of trending...
PSA for instance admins: new joiners are not shown posts in all languages. Please pin posts about this potential issue, or find another way to explain it to them
Examples
Seems like new joiners don't automatically get all the languages displayed, as it used to be. For Jlai.lu, they only had French. Is this something that can be configured admin-side?
Update: a fix should be available in the coming days
/r/Transgender_Surgeries/ are discussing a backup after their temporary ban, does someone want to jump in and explain them how they could use Lemmy for this?
There are 92k of you in this sub, and those are just the people who have Reddit accounts. This sub a resource used by a lot of people all over the...
Are you seeing an increase of members registration in your respective instances the past few days?
Reddit seems to have messed up recently in mass banning subreddits and claiming they were unmoderated.
On the main French subreddit, three threads [1] [2] [3] have been posted about its potential decline and available alternatives. As a result, since the beginning of the week, jlai.lu has seen around 100 new accounts created. I don't have the motivation to make stats about it (and I'm notoriously bad at maths), but that's more than what we've had in the past few months.
I was wondering if any admins had noticed a similar trend on their own instances? What has been your approach in welcoming this sudden influx of new users?
Lemmy advertisement
I'm sharing this pic because it might be useful, to advertise Lemmy in Reddit meme communities and the likes. It isn't supposed to be a full info dump, just to spread the word that Lemmy exists and give people some room to ask questions about it.
The copypasta is from @[email protected]. The meme is from @[email protected].
Here's the source SVG file in case anyone wants to edit it.
EDIT - @[email protected] had a great take on this idea, I need to share it here:
Global Swtich Day - Join The Fediverse
Today is Global Switch Day for the Fediverse, and to be honest it surprised me after waking up and seeing @[email protected] posting about it. Post by @[email protected] View on Mastodon I follow Dan closely due to his work on PixelFed & Loops, amazing platforms that has been
Nice infographic I found on Mastodon
Attached: 1 image π£ Happy #GlobalSwitchDay to all the brave frontrunners out there! For whom February 1st came a little too soon, don't worry! Just try again on March 1st and celebrate Zero Discrimination Day in the beautiful #fediverse. Alternatively, you can switch on April 1st, as only fools s...
Slidedeck about Meta's Rot & The Fediverse
The Case for the Fediverse By: Bossbear Or: βWTF is going on with Social Media!?β Content Warning β Includes quotes depicting: Racism, Sexism, Homophobia, Transphobia, Hate Speech
Now's the time to start talking about Matrix+Fediverse
Hey all, I just wanted to give my personal view, now is the time to start talking about the Fediverse seriously with friends and family. I always have casually, but I'm starting serious talks with them now that the political climate has... shifted.
We are not the only ones who are concerned about our online privacy. Even people I thought didn't really care are suddenly concerned (or realizing) that their private chats and DMs may not be as private as they thought. I've found that many more people are interested than were even just a few months ago.
Fediverse is a bit harder, I've found it's easier to convince family with "It's a more private space for us to share vacation photos like we used to". Even my aging relatives know that facebook isn't safe to upload intimate family photos to, and they're looking for a solution. Friendica works well for this (and it's relatively easy to host a family instance).
Matrix has honestly been easier. It works similar to Discord so those us
Most important features/fixes for Lemmy for new users?
I'll start with this: https://github.com/LemmyNet/lemmy-ui/issues/2318
Remotely open post, similar to remote follow
An easy way to open the current post in your home instance.
This would be in addition to the text
"You must log in or register to comment."
It would open the current post in your home instance. Similar to how remote follow opens the community in your home instance.
New users on Lemmy often click links and end up on a page that looks almost identical except the address bar says a different domain name, and they wonder why they aren't logged in anymore. I think this would be a pretty easy feature to implement.
Make sure to put thumbs up reactions so the devs know to prioritize them.
Brainstorming: how should we name a Lemmy community dedicated to the promotion of the Fediverse?
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/post/36427894
Hello everyone,
@[email protected] created [email protected] to synchronize efforts to promote the Fediverse on existing social media (e.g. that Reddit thread on /r/Technology which got a few people joining Lemmy)
Spaduf wasn't aware of the existence of [email protected] , which is an existing community focused on the internal growt on the Fediverse, mostly between mods and regular posters trying to make Lemmy/Mbin/Piefed communitied grow.
To avoid confusion between the two communities, we are thinking about a potential new community, with a different name.
Potential options we came up with:
What do you all think? Do you have any other ideas for the name of that new community?
Advice Wanted - Migrating close family to Friendica
Hey folks, most of you probably have seen me around, I'm coming up on 2 years here and big believer like most of you. With the downfall of FB and Meta I have a lot of family who are genuinely interested in what I described as "A private way for us to share photos and updates, like we used to before FB... you know", and there was genuine positive feedback.
Next I set up friendica, and so far I'm happy, I think it'll do. Solid local sharing and privacy for sharing family specific things - but that's the easy part. The hard part is now how do I convince people to join - and harder - stay.
A lot of my tech friends want to do something similar, I think small family oriented instances like this could be great! However, how do I explain what else there is to offer to family who, let's all be real, do not want to hear an explanation of the fediverse? How can I word it in the most basic of ways without also sounding boring? That's the real kicker. Interested in opinions
More about keeping people here than getting them here, but hopefully useful
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/22551453
A little procedure I follow to help noobs get seen by others. I used to do what most people do and boost their # introduction posts, but I think most people want to see more natural engagement and sort of glaze their eyes over when they see the intro tag, so here's what I do:
- Create a list called "noobs," hidden from home timeline.
- Go to # introduction
- Follow every poster with fewer than say 25 followers and add them to "noobs"Β
- Periodically browse "noobs" for interesting* toots, boost them
- Periodically unfollow accounts in "noobs" (do not remove from list! That puts them in your main stable of follows!)
- Repeat
I don't consider it spam-following, because I'm actually giving these accounts a good deal of attention and a good shot at being seen by a few hundred more people. Often I'll genuinely like an account and remove them from the list instead of unfollowing them. I haven't really tested this
Another infographic that has been passed around
It's detailed for those who are curious about the logistics, but I think it also risks a bit of information overload. Use as you see appropriate.
It was created by @[email protected] and I remember it helping explain things around the time I joined.
What works and what doesn't?
Have any of y'all convinced somebody to make the switch? If so, how'd it go? What worked and what needs work?