You didn’t get me.
On a small instance, remote communities are only federated if a user subscribes to that community. It wasn’t the case for that community on OP’s instance. It’s a technical issue, no instances politics at hand here
No, it’s more than as their instance is quite small, nobody federated with that precise community
Yes if they are specifically creating said content to nurture Lemmy.
The issue is finding people wanting to create such content.
When you look at who create the posts here, it’s probably around 50 people in the general communities. The 50 of us prevent the platform from looking like a ghost town, out of 44k active users. And that’s an easy job, it’s just repost content from Reddit. How many artists, data visualizers, etc do you think we have here?
Artists wise, the only one I know is David Revoy who does nice work to promote Mastodon and others: https://www.davidrevoy.com/article1043/my-neighbor-mastodon-and-fediverse
But that’s about it. You have some people sharing their creations on !lemmy_stitch@sh.itjust.works or !artshare@lemmy.world , but would those creations stand out if shared on Reddit, next to dozens of similar artwork?
I’m trying to be realistic here, OC would be nice, but we probably don’t have the numbers, and more importantly, we are competing against Reddit 2024.
I think the platform inspires snark and winner takes all mentality.
It’s really community dependant. As I said, tech communities can be quite toxic
Interesting, thanks for sharing
The barrier to entry on Lemmy is pretty huge for new people.
What you described is true for non Fediverse users, but I was talking about Mastodon or Sharkey users. To be honest, I think the discoverability/blocking issues are even worse on those platforms than Lemmy.
If I had to suggest one way to reduce that barrier to entry I’d suggest building a default set of subscriptions (maybe take all of the trending communities from the last 12 or 18mo and put them in a feed) so that new people can start participating more quickly. I think that would reduce the “fuck this I give up” rate considerably.
That could help, but good luck defining those without having duplicates such as !movies@lemmy.world and !movies@lemm.ee into the mix, confusing people on another level
Hm, they still said
If you weren’t trying to be rude and it came off that way by mistake, my bad
But yeah, not the best interaction indeed
Some Linux users can be so toxic it’s cringe.
And I use Linux.
The issue is that Reddit became a place to host OC because it had such a large userbase. Originally, it was just a link agregators based on votes, there were not even comments or subs.
There is some OC created here in !inktober@sh.itjust.works for instance, but realistically, if someone made a nice infographic today, would they really only post it here on Lemmy, and not share it on Reddit as well, the picture itself, without any reference to Lemmy, to avoid their publication to get removed?
Edit: Instagram and Twitter would also be places to reach a much wider audience compared to here
Lack of even remotely niche content (aside from Linux and infosec content)
Until 0.19.6 comes out of beta and Lemmy.world upgrades to it, it’s actually hard for any other instance besides it to remain up to date with content.
For people reading this: the top 20 instances are up-to-date with LW with the exception of aussie.zone and programming.dev (the latter one being an issue with their own database, nothing to do with LW)
Even communities for fairly large hobbies or interests can be dead on Lemmy.
Have you looked at !newcommunities@lemmy.world ?
Power tripping mods.
Voyager has word filters : https://m.lemmy.world/
Have you tried setting up the languages in the settings? If communities don’t configure languages properly, you can also point it out to them
Have a look at !meanwhileongrad@sh.itjust.works
You don’t have to as those are in the settings you can export/import
Indeed @jerry@fedia.io FYI
Feel free to report power tripping on !yepowertrippinbastards@lemmy.dbzer0.com
Agreed, not sure if it’s unpopular.