this post was submitted on 15 Jun 2023
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Asklemmy
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I've been thinking about this for the last couple days, and I agree. There's even the problem of duplicate "subs* popping up on other instances. Federation as it currently is seems to be something that works a lot better with a Twitter alternative than a Reddit one. There's probably some tweaks that can be done to make it a more unified experience. I have some ideas, but I don't think they'd work.
These are my suggestions, and I'm sure there's a reason why they haven't been done.
But you can also have multiple subs on reddit for the same topic. e.g. AI and ArtificialIntelligence. People choose the best one and they either stand or fall based on merit. Things will settle down.
I completely disagree with that it works better for mastodon than lemmy. I think it was confusing as hell on mastodon, but makes perfectly good sense on lemmy.
Communities are a major advantage, because they allow people without technical knowhow and capital, to create and moderate places of common discussion. This was an issue with mastodon because instances was the only way to divide users into topics, which prevented non tech savvy people from making these categories. Having communities, separates the concern of hosting from the concern of moderating.
Furthermore, I don't understand the problem people have with "duplicate" instances. What is the issue with subscribing to more than one? It's not like you have a limited number of subscriptions. There are already a couple threads on the issue tracker on GitHub, about implementing "multi communities" and so on, it has too many downfalls in my opinion.
I’ve been thinking a bit about this lately since the Reddit migration started. I believe it could be solved at the client level at least. Unifying magazines over instances and behind the scenes pull in and follows twin magazines at other instances and presents them in a single abstract magazine.
There are probably reasons why you at the server level or user level want the low level community access and behavior we have today but judging of all comments and how we typically behave as humans I would say that is rather the unusual case not the mainstream.
Such users could easily then opt in at the instance level and everyone else looking for a more “centralized” experience can still have that through the client app.
No doubt it would take some work but I believe it is very doable given my understanding of the Activity Pub protocol and how it works today.