So I’m assuming the duplicate communities are communities of the same exact name in different instances/server. Is anyone else finding this somewhat confusing?

Is there a way to find/pick the “right” one, or should it just be based on whichever has the most users?

New to Fediverse (here and Mastodon), still trying to wrap my head around the whole thing.

  • @kennocha@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    English
    21 year ago

    The same is not true of Reddit.

    If I subscribe to /r/music, I see all post.

    If I as a user subscribe to /c/music on Lemmy.world, I get only posts from lemmy.world.

    These two are completely different, and that’s why it is going to struggle.

    https://lemmy.world/c/music https://sh.itjust.works/c/music

    If we can’t simplify this problem, the platform will struggle to gain serious ground.

    • ren (a they/them)
      link
      fedilink
      English
      31 year ago

      On reddit though, there are thousand of music communities. How did you know which was the right one? Subscriber count.

      it’s okay though, it’s early days, pretty sure some communities in some instances will be the main one. You’ll see the user counts and active users to help guide you. And maybe there WILL be two mains for the same topic - is that bad? If 2 general music communities both have huge active users, just subscribe to both! easy peasy!

      I’ve subscribed to a few dupes here, it’s all gravy. And I’m doing my best to nurture an alternative music community. =)

    • CarlsIII
      link
      fedilink
      21 year ago

      This is exactly like Reddit. On Reddit, if you subscribed to “gaming”, you would not also see posts from “games.” You would have to subscribe to both to see posts from both. If you want to see posts from music@lemmy.world, but also from music communities on other instances, you would subscribe to both.