• kadu@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    If a Lemmy user searches “woodworking” and the biggest woodworking community isn’t on your instance, you have to leave Lemmy

    It seems like you have a misunderstanding about how Lemmy works. This is incorrect.

    You’ll be able to see all “woodworking” communities that exist in your instance or that are federated with your instance. This difference isn’t subtle, because as long as somebody from your instance has interacted with the external one, they’ll immediately start syncing.

    For instance, I can search for “gaming” on my Lemmy.world account and the biggest communities aren’t even hosted here. Yet, I can follow them and interact normally, and I needed zero external sites or tools to find them.

    The only possible friction is hosting your own l Lemmy instance, or joining one that is likely to be defederated from others. But most users will not create an account on a shady instance, they’ll likely join the biggest “normal looking” public ones, and so far, federation hasn’t been an issue (apart from debates regarding very politically noisy instances).

    This very chain of comments exists because I, a Lemmy.world user, had zero issues joining this Lemmy.ml community.

    Oh, and by the way, downvoting my comment means absolutely nothing - you’ve accomplished nothing, because that button doesn’t mean “I disagree”.

    • alp@lemmy.zip
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      10 months ago

      I don’t agree with your conjecture about the user not understanding how Lemmy works. My understanding is that he does not think it’s a good system.

      • kadu@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        The way he described how it works is objectively and verifiably wrong - it simply does not work like that. Whether he likes Lemmy or not is a separate matter, that doesn’t change how it works.