I don't love this idea either but let's tone the hostility down eh? Got a friendly community here, let's keep it that way.
thirdorbital
This is hugely personal to your own interests. Personally I am subscribed to communities around news, science, gaming, whiskey, and my favorite sports team. You can always use the community browser to look for something specific or just keep an eye on the "all" listing to see if something catches your eye.
I naively want to believe that this won't be an issue for most users having most conversations. But out of curiosity can you link what the ban list actually contains?
So just sort of "preserve the knowledge of mankind" sort of thing? Prevent society from having to re-invent the wheel? Sounds like an interesting challenge, best of luck with it.
You can search for existing communities using the community browser.
I'm not even certain what all "Datahording" entails but !datahoarder@lemmy.ml appears to be one such community.
I mean sure, they can take their toys and go home. It's their instance; it's their prerogative. I guess I just don't understand why anyone would want to be invested in a tiny little dictatorship where four admins run every single community.
Ok so help me understand here. The root post is Beehaw complaining that their four admins can't handle the new influx of users. But isn't that the entire point of moderators? Shouldn't each community be responsible for dealing with trolls, etc? From what I've seen of Beehaw, they're attempting to have the same handful of admins moderate every single community, which was never going to be sustainable and IMHO misses the entire point of this sort of experience.
I find this very disappointing, not because I'm hugely attached to Beehaw (although their large gaming community has dominated my feed this week). But rather because the first response to whatever adversity they were facing, real or perceived, is to take the nuclear option. The biggest drawback to Lemmy as opposed to Reddit is the over fragmentation and the lack of quality content, so intentionally increasing those challenges feels short-sighted and bad for the ecosystem as a whole.
Yeah, in the web UI. Haven't tried any apps yet though that's on my to-do list.
Not what you're asking, but it took me the longest time to figure out that you can set your default home page to your subscribed communities instead of whatever is more-or-less-randomly hosted on sh.itjust.works. (It's the "Type" setting in your user profile). Hopefully this helps anyone who stumbles on this.
As yet another former Redditor trying to make sense of the decentralized model, there is something very comforting knowing "sh.itjust.works". Thanks for doing this.
I agree with the spirit of this 100% and will support any way I can. I only hope the implementation is free of trolls, bots, and other bad actors.