Just starting to familiarize myself with everything after about a decade at reddit. I understand that you can view content across instances but I’m noticing that both kbin and lemmy have similar (competing?) magazines/communities.

For example @PCGaming and !pcgaming (lemmyworld) but then there is also, @pcgaming, [email protected], etc.

Do I have to subscribe to all of them? Or are there “official” fediverse communities?

As I said, I’m still trying to figure things out, but subscribing to so many similar communities seems cumbersome for the user and (imo) fragments userbases that are literally talking about the same thing.

Thanks in advance!

  • Rottcodd@kbin.social
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    6
    ·
    2 years ago

    You don’t have to do anything. You can subscribe to as many or as few of them as you want. Yeah - it’s a bit cumbersome, but the functionality already exists to search for a community name (like “pcgaming”) and get links to all of the communities with that name from all of the federated instances, and then you can just run down the list and click on the link on each one to subscribe to it, and you’re done.

    When you open your subscription feed, you’ll get the posts from all of them, and in fact you’ll have to look at the url on a specific one to even know which specific instance it’s on, since they’ll all look and act the same on your feed.

    And no - there aren’t any “official” communities, and that’s by design, and actually a lot of the point. When there are single, monolithic communities and they go bad, the users often have no recourse. That’s when, on Reddit someone would go off and start a new sub and try to draw posters over there.

    But here, the damage that assholes and idiots can do is limited by the fact that the content is already spread over multiple communities, and you can avoid the bad ones just by unsubscribing or blocking them, and all the rest of the content will still be there on your feed.