Communities just jumping around all the time. Its getting difficult to keep up.

These are the responsible ones who’ve managed the move well. Others just add a lil disclaimer in the sidebar.

  • halcyoncmdr@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    That’s what happens when servers either shut down or instance admins end up being insufferable to the point that entire communities choosing to abandon the instance.

    Not sure what would be an alternative solution given how federation works.

    • Skavau@piefed.social
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      9 hours ago

      I think maybe it could be set up that closed communities could be manually hidden from search results, or defunct instances essentially completely delisted. Piefed handles this better because you can directly filter by weekly activity in the community browser.

    • kadu@scribe.disroot.org
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      1 day ago

      The solution is to not treat communities like official and unique subreddits.

      On Reddit there’s the PCGaming subreddit. On Lemmy there are more than five. Subscribe to all, or the most active ones, or the ones you align yourself better with… And that’s it, there’s no need to be concerned about which individual post goes on which individual community for a topic, it will federate and others will read it just fine.

      • scintilla@crust.piefed.social
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        21 hours ago

        The problem with that is that the threadiverse(?) Is still small enough that dividing it in half means you’ve reduced engagement by far more than that. Let alone having 5 different communities with the same tooic. Piefed handles Cross-Posts way better though so it’s less of an issue for me now that it was on Lemmy.

      • cornshark@lemmy.world
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        21 hours ago

        Won’t that just lead to 5 of every topic? Also what do you do find new duplicate communities if there were only 4 when you went looking?

        • kadu@scribe.disroot.org
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          12 hours ago

          Won’t that just lead to 5 of every topic?

          That happens on Reddit even with singular communities. Sure, maybe some topics will come up multiple times.

          Also what do you do find new duplicate communities if there were only 4 when you went looking?

          Browse the All feed. See a post you like? Check the community. Not subscribed? Subscribe. Simple.

          • Skavau@piefed.social
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            9 hours ago

            That happens on Reddit even with singular communities. Sure, maybe some topics will come up multiple times.

            Yeah, but Reddit has a much larger userbase and in some cases it’s good that topics can be split across multiple communities. The Fediverse has the opposite problem.

      • ZombiFrancis@sh.itjust.works
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        10 hours ago

        A sort of opt-in consensus bases community level federation.

        Ex: if a fragmented communities could federate their content so they each drew posts and comments from each other in a sort of redundant cross-posting feature maybe. So a ‘memes’ community could pull from all other ‘memes’ communities its instance federates with like they’re on a separate circuit.