21
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by answersplease77@lemmy.world to c/reddit@lemmy.world

First please don't ban me I'm new.

lemmy.world, lemmy.ml , lemmy.xxx, lemmy.whatever, etct... + hundreds of clones. Is each of these a Reddit by itself containing many subreddits inside it?

Does that mean if someone in lemmy.xxx/c/jokes posted something interesting that I wont even see it because I'm signed up in lemmy.yyy/c/jokes ?

That is quite a weakness of lemmy compared to reddit. Can I post on lemmy.yyy if I signed up for lemmy.xxx or do I have to sign up for each of them?

Which one should I sign up for?

How can I see all lemmy posts in one place? I can't believe no one has found a solution to this yet and just let hundreds of clones post repeated things. Also how is each moderated? Is lemmy.yyy moderated by sensitive snowflakes who ban anyone who cusses or offends anyone, while lemmy.xxx is ran by racist nazis? How does this work?

Edit: Thank you I read all comments and thank you some where very helpful. and I hope things get improved and added with time. here for the long ride

top 50 comments
sorted by: hot top controversial new old
[-] eoddc5@lemmy.world 51 points 1 year ago
[-] answersplease77@lemmy.world 0 points 1 year ago

yes off course, but help me please. How can I see all the memes posted by all lemmy.nnn/c/memes in one place so that I see the top ones? where nnn is ml/world/xxx/etc. I really wish there's a solution to this thing

[-] eoddc5@lemmy.world 20 points 1 year ago

It’s literally how lemmy works

You can sign up anywhere and see anywhere.

load more comments (3 replies)
[-] livus@kbin.social 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

At the moment you just subscribe to any meme communities you like, across the federation, and you can see and comment in all of them. Sooner or later we're going to be able to group them like multireddits.

This is decentralised.

196 might be a good place for you to start, they are bringing the memes.

[-] Candelestine@lemmy.world 44 points 1 year ago

Got ya covered, I wrote this for folks just like you:

https://lemmy.world/post/583669

[-] mysoulishome@lemmy.world 19 points 1 year ago

To be fair I read all of that stuff too and it didn’t make sense until I signed up for an account and just started using it. When we moved from MySpace to Facebook and digg to Reddit it started off confusing as well.

load more comments (6 replies)
[-] DevCat@lemmy.world 20 points 1 year ago

I would suggest reading this FAQ that's been put together.

https://lemmy.world/post/37906

Also, just subscribe to https://lemmy.world/c/lemmyworld to keep up to date on this instance.

Unlike Reddit, which is a monolith with many subreddits run by volunteer mods, Lemmy is federated. That is, volunteers run their own servers which then are joined to the fediverse and can populate their own communities onto other instances/servers. Each instance/server can run as many or as few communities as the owner decides. Once a server/instance is fully federated, you can subscribe to communities on other instances from your own. The easiest way to subscribe to communities on other instances is to just click on the "Communities" link at the top of this page, and select "All".

Each instance/server can have its own policies as to what is acceptable. We have an instance that is specifically for NSFW content, https://lemmynsfw.com/. That makes it much easier to limit what your kids can or cannot see. Currently, we have an instance, beehaw, that is described as a walled garden with high-quality content. The volunteers are overwhelmed with all the redittors showing up and have decided to temporarily de-federate. That is, although you can see their communities and posts from elsewhere, they cannot see yours. We are hoping this will be temporary.

This is actually an excellent feature of Lemmy. It allows instance owners, hopefully with advice from their users, to disconnect certain kinds of content. To see which instances a particular instance is connected/disconnected to/from just add "/instances" to the end of the server name. For this instance, that would be:

https://lemmy.world/instances

Having multiple instances/servers can lead to duplicate communities being created on several servers/instances. Eventually, the smaller copies will probably drop away. Here is the current list of communities in the fediverse, sorted by popularity:

https://lemmyverse.net/communities

[-] southsamurai@sh.itjust.works 15 points 1 year ago

Okay, think of lemmy less like reddit, and more like a bunch of reddits that can all talk to each other. Each "instance" like lemmy.world, sh.itjust.works, sopuli.xyz, is a mini reddit. They can (and likely will) have as many communities as they want, and may have duplicate communities.

As an example, there's !sopuli.xyz/c/knives, and !lemmy.world/c/knives. Both are a community for knives and the people that like them, just like r/knives was. However, unlike reddit, two instances can have communities with the same short name of "knives", because they're different servers.

This is much like reddit having r/knives, r/knifeclub, r/pocketknives, and r/slipjoints. It's actually exactly the same as that, where each community has its own mods, own rules, and requirements.


Now, by default all of these mini reddits talk to each other. But, much like with r/the_donald, if one of these mini reddits goes crazy and starts causing trouble, it can be "banned" by other mini reddits by "defederation",which just means that other instances decide to block the crazy one.

For individual communities, you can block those as a user.

There are instances that focus on political extremes, and they are often defederated long before we r/efugees left and came to one of them.


As you may note, if you look at my user name, it is very simple for someone to find and access other instances from their "home" instance. This account is on sh.itjust.works.

On lemmy, you have three ways to view things. The first is "all". This means that you scroll through and see everything posted that your home instance is connected to. This is usually a fun way to discover communities as long as you don't mind seeing things you aren't interested in along the way.

Depending on how you access lemmy, you can subscribe to communities with a simple click or tap on the community name. It can be a bit finicky via browser because links take you to the community on its home instance. The easiest way to fix that is to add @your home instance at the end of something. As an example, sopuli.xyz/c/knives@sh.itjust.works would take me to c/knives within my home instance, and allow me to subscribe remotely rather than having to sign up on the other instance.

In most of the apps, they take care of that for you, and you can subscribe with a tap on the c/ name in a post header, then the subscribe button (though it isn't always in the same place in all apps). For someone brand new to lemmy, I recommend jerboa as the first app to try because it has the most fundamental functions in an easy to find way. Subscriptions and blocking are very easy to do.


the other two ways to view lemmy are "subscibed", and "local". The first is going to show you only communities you've subscribed to. The second will show you everything from your home instance.


To find interesting communities, there are multiple options. You can search in your app or browser (open the hamburger icon on the top right to find that function). This will pull up matches to your search term if a community matching that term has been viewed from your home instance before. Since most of the bigger instances are well linked, you're going to have options most of the time.

There's also https://lemmyverse.net which can help you find things fairly easy. There's other options, but I don't want to swamp you, and those are the two easiest.


So, it isn't as hard as it looks. The functionality is similar enough to reddit overall, and the learning curve isn't any heavier than starting to use reddit was (I remember fucking up many a time back 13 or so years ago lol, catching bans because I didn't understand things, etc).

What's more, unlike reddit, most people here will help you without picking on you. There's trolls here too, but less of them, and they tend to not do well.

The differences you're seeing and thinking are a disadvantage compared to reddit really aren't. With lemmy being decentralized and federated, what happened at reddit can't destroy lemmy. The worst that can happen is individual instances closing or being assholes enough to need defederated. You may lose an account, but it's trivial to find another instance. Seriously, because of the way reddit acted, I decided not to put al my eggs in one basket. I have accounts at all of the major instances, and some minor ones (though not under this name).

Individual instances have different signup requirements, but the first night I applied to one of the more restricted ones that require manual approval to activate the account for use, I was able to post and use the account within hours. Some instances take longer, but not more than a day or so, and it's usually the smaller ones run by a small team.


moderation is as broad as reddit is/was. Each instance has its own rules, which communities and users must abide by while using them. Each community can expand on those as needed.

Just like reddit, in other words.

Generally though, as long as you aren't being abusive, trolling heavily, or espousing extremist actions, you aren't going to run into much trouble. Even the most restrictive instances don't boot you just for cursing or being emotional. You'll almost always be warned and guided to the rules rather than banned for a first offense.


Which instance you make your home instance is mostly unimportant. Since (currently) there's only a small handful of instances that are defederated almost universally, you can access most of lemmy from any of the rest. You'd want to avoid lemmygrad and burggit.moe (the first is heavily political and in a bad way, the second allows what is called "loli" erotic art, which isn't something most folks want to associate with).

Beehaw.org has defederated more than most, and has much tighter restrictions overall, so as a home instance, it has limitations. But it's a very friendly instance with a curated community list, so it's also a great place to get your feet wet if they approve your application to join.

There's no real advantage or disadvantage to being on a smaller or larger instance for your home overall. The one you're posting from is just fine tbh. I wouldn't try switching or adding to that until you've gotten used to things a bit more.


For real, lemmy is way easier that it looks coming from reddit. Reddit has the benefit of being more established, and centralized in that regard. But driving into reddit as a new user isn't much easier at all.

Welcome to the fediverse, my r/efugee homie :). It's nice here, and there's so much fun to be had

[-] dohpaz42@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

Would it cause problems if I signed up on another server using the same username?

[-] southsamurai@sh.itjust.works 1 points 1 year ago

Nope! None at all. Use names *displayz as southsamurai or dohpaz43, but they're all something like southsamurai@sh.itjust.works under the hood.

I could have southsamurai@lemmy.ml, and southsamurai@lemmy.world, and southsamurai@*every instance out there, and the only way it might be a problem is for anyone else wanting to use the same name :)

[-] gamers_Mate@lemmy.world 8 points 1 year ago

First please don’t ban me I’m new.

That would be a silly reason to ban you for dont worry your good. ^^

lemmy.world, lemmy.ml , lemmy.xxx, lemmy.whatever, etct… + hundreds of clones. Is each of these a Reddit by itself containing many subreddits inside it?

Sort of but it is all connected so if you view all you will be able to see all the lemmy.insertname that are connected kind of like /r/all but it includes other lemmy sites. (Think of it like crossplay between playstation and Xbox if that helps.)

Does that mean if someone in lemmy.xxx/c/jokes posted something interesting that I wont even see it because I’m signed up in lemmy.yyy/c/jokes ? It will still appear in (all) regardless but you can also search in (local) if you want that specific version of /c/jokes

That is quite a weakness of lemmy compared to reddit. Can I post on lemmy.yyy if I signed up for lemmy.xxx or do I have to sign up for each of them? No you can view and comment on other instances

Which one should I sign up for? Any is fine though Personally I chose Lemmy world and kbin social.

How can I see all lemmy posts in one place? I can’t believe no one has found a solution to this yet and just let hundreds of clones post repeated things. Also how is each moderated? Is lemmy.yyy moderated by sensitive snowflakes who ban anyone who cusses or offends anyone, while lemmy.xxx is ran by racist nazis? How does this work? Instances can block other instances aka defederating think of it as one country putting an embargo on another. For example we have defederated from a maga instance and a tankie instance.

[-] UselesslyBrisk@infosec.pub 2 points 1 year ago

Subscribe to the communities. They aren’t clones. Just different instances. There’s a few links on how to subscribe.

My reccomendation is to go here, hit the home icon and type your instance name. Then search for instances that interest you and join.

https://lemmyverse.net/

[-] VulcanSphere@kbin.social 1 points 1 year ago

Hello, commenting from kbin (social) here.

[-] bobthened@feddit.uk 6 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

It’s not a single website like Reddit or twitter. It’s a network of interconnected ”instances”. You can view and access and comment on any of the content from any one of them from from any other of them. So you only need one account. You can even subscribe to communities that are based on a difference instance from you.

For example I am commenting here from an account on feddit.uk but this post is on Lemmy.world

load more comments (4 replies)
[-] GlennMagusHarvey@mander.xyz 4 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Hey, welcome to the threadiverse! I'm also a newbie, whose only prior experience with this sort of site has been Reddit (as well as internet forums but they're not quite the same type of thing), so here's what I've figured out so far. (The "threadiverse" is the informal name for the realm of Reddit-like websites linked by federation.)

Apologies for another long post for you to read, but I'll try to make this an easy read. (Feel free to tell me I suck in if you think I wrote this badly or if it was stuff you already knew.)

On Reddit, you have one site, which has a ton of subreddits, each of which is like a little forum and is independently moderated (within the limits of the larger site's policies, of course). Lemmy and /kbin are, basically, like many little "reddits", with a twist: they can talk to each other and so you can be a member of one "reddit" and post/comment on another. Also, subreddits are called "communities" on Lemmy and "magazines" on /kbin but they basically work the same way. You can subscribe to them and see posts from them and post to them, even if they're on other "reddits".

So, yes, you can have your account on lemmy.world, but also subscribe to (for example) /c/patientgamers at sh.itjust.works (which is sometimes written as !patientgamers@sh.itjust.works). Meanwhile, what if you're also interested in the content at /c/patientgamers on lemmy.ml? Well, you can subscribe to that too! (Think of it like being subscribed to two slightly-differently-named subreddits.)

While there's only one actual Reddit which has all the many many subreddits, in the threadiverse there are many "reddits", each of which has some "subreddits". There may be some duplication of more general topics, like memes, but you'll also often find that more specialized "subreddits" are only on certain "reddits" -- for example, my instance, mander.xyz, has a lot of nature and science related communities, not found on other instances. And each of those "reddits" has its own rules, and each of those "subreddits" has its own rules within the instance that hosts it. You'll want to check each out to get a feel for the vibes in each place.

And now for the nitty gritty.

The way this all works is that you basically have two ways to see everything on the threadiverse: (1) on the site where the thing is, and (2) on your home instance. For example, you posted your message on lemmy.world. I can go to lemmy.world to read your post, but I can't reply there, unless I have a lemmy.world account. So how am I commenting? I'm typing this reply to you on mander.xyz. That's because I'm viewing your post on my home instance. I saw your post on the feed of another instance (acutally a /kbin instance, located at fedia.io), and I wanted to reply, so on that page, I got the link to your post ( https://lemmy.world/post/928037 ), copied it and pasted it into my own instance's search bar, and pulled it up on my instance (Mander), and here I am, typing my reply.

Now, I did this only because my instance doesn't already know about your post. I'm not subscribed to !reddit@lemmy.world, which is where you posted this. If I were subscribed, then your post would have appeared in my subscribed feed, on my instance, already. And I'd just view your post and type my reply just like it were a post on my own instance. I'm subscribed to !patientgamers@sh.itjust.works, so new posts there will show up on my subscribed feed.

The first thing I did when I wanted to join Lemmy was that I needed to pick an instance to join. But the second thing I did, almost concurrently, was that I started noticing all the different places that had content I wanted to see. I made a quick list of all those different communities/magazines. So once I joined, I just went and subscribed to all of them.

You can see what communities are on a given instance by clicking "communities" at the top of the page. (Or "Magazines" if you're on a /kbin site.) So I basically just went through the communities lists of a bunch of instances, and checked out what people were posting about, and asked myself, "hey, do I wanna hang out here?".

How do I subscribe? I go to the webpage for the community, like going to the subreddit, and I hit subscribe. What if it's on another instance? I just take its URL, copy it, and paste it in my instance's search bar. Wait a few seconds, then there's a link to the community via my instance. Click subscribe. (Sometimes it's a little buggy and have to go into a post to subscribe. Or it says "subscribe pending" after I click. But, really, I actually am subscribed, and I can tell because those posts start showing up on my subscribed feed.)

Where are my subscribed posts? I just go to my instance's home page (mander.xyz for me, lemmy.world for you) and I can click "Subscribed". Or "Local", which shows posts on my instance. Or "All", which is a feed of all the posts my instance knows about (local and remote). And I can sort them in different ways too.

The search box is surprisingly useful on fediverse platforms, I've found. On Lemmy and /kbin, I can copy the address of any community/magazine or post or comment and stick it in my instance's search box. Wait a few seconds, and it'll find it, and I click on it and do my thing. Sometimes I find posts that my instance didn't know about at all before I pulled them up, so they're "missing" comments that I can see on the post's actual address, but I don't need to see them all on my instance, I just need to pull up the one I want to reply to and post my reply. By the way, these links are that colorful little fediverse star you see beneath your posts. (On /kbin it's in "more" -> "copy URL to fediverse".) Everything has an address and every address is searchable, it seems.

So here's basically how I'm using Lemmy now:

  • load up mander.xyz (my homepage)
  • check my notifications (which i'll get when people reply to me)
  • check my Subscribed feed, and optionally, the Local feed, or even the All feed (if I'm extra bored). anything my instance already knows about is something I can post on like it were local.
  • if I want to check out extra stuff on other instances, I can easily just go to those instances and read stuff. If I want to comment/etc., I find a link from there, go back to my instance, paste it in the search box, and do my thing.

Hope this helps!

[-] answersplease77@lemmy.world 0 points 1 year ago

Thank you! I learned more things I didn't know from this comment. These tips really improve the user experience. Thanks

[-] GlennMagusHarvey@mander.xyz 2 points 1 year ago

Glad I could help!

[-] Gleddified@lemmy.ca 3 points 1 year ago

Works like email - Lemmy.ml, Lemmy.xxx, lemmy.whatever is just the email provider you choose. Just like picking gmail, outlook, yahoo, protonmail, etc. They can still all talk to each other, so the provider you pick doesn't matter in that regard.

Instead of sending emails to people, I use this site to send shitposts. The underlying tech is very similar though

[-] buxtonwater@lemmy.world 3 points 1 year ago

Unless your home instance is defederated right? Then you get shadowbanned from said defederated communities.

[-] Gleddified@lemmy.ca 1 points 1 year ago

Not sure how that works, someone smarter than me would have to say. You can still read posts from them (unless your instance doesn't allow it) but can't comment/post?

[-] adamgrey@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

Pretty sure you can comment still but those comments will never show up in the original post. Just your federation's copy of the post

[-] halfempty@kbin.social 2 points 1 year ago

All the Lemmy and kbin instances can see anything posted on any other instance. It's all what they call "Federated" content. Best to pick an instance which is not too overloaded, but still has plenty of links to existing Federated content. Correct me if I'm wrong, but I think that if you or anyone else on your instance subscribe to a "Magazine" (like a subreddit), then your instance will have an established link to that Federated content.

[-] DrNeurohax@kbin.social 2 points 1 year ago

Correct. Also, in Lemmy "magazines" are "communities".

[-] ZenGrammy@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago
[-] PleaseSandwich@kbin.social 2 points 1 year ago

What I don't understand yet is kbin vs a Lemmy instance. I have an account on kbin, and I understand this post comes from a Lemmy instance. So kbin can view posts from Lemmy instances it's connected to. But my understanding is that I couldn't use a Lemmy client with my kbin login. I'm waiting for a beta invite for #Artemis but even when I have that, it sounds like it wouldn't support Lemmy right away. So do I need to also register on a Lemmy instance? And how would I juggle logins?

[-] dumples@kbin.social 3 points 1 year ago

So federation is like medieval kingdoms. I am a citizen of Kbin so they know me and give me a token. Now I can use this Kbin token to get to any kingdom that let's me in lemmy.world or beehaw. They don't know me but they know that their buddy earnest at the kingdom of Kbin can vouch for me. So they let me in.

So won't need a login at these other places since I can use my Kbin token. So with a single login can work to talk to any who let's me.

If a site is defederated that means two kingdoms are fighting. So the lemmy.world token won't let you into beehaw because they are defederated.

[-] dumples@kbin.social 2 points 1 year ago

So federation is like medieval kingdoms. I am a citizen of Kbin so they know me and give me a token. Now I can use this Kbin token to get to any kingdom that let's me in lemmy.world or beehaw. They don't know me but they know that their buddy earnest at the kingdom of Kbin can vouch for me. So they let me in.

So won't need a login at these other places since I can use my Kbin token. So with a single login can work to talk to any who let's me.

If a site is defederated that means two kingdoms are fighting. So the lemmy.world token won't let you into beehaw because they are defederated.

[-] mochi@kbin.social 2 points 1 year ago

Artemis is supposed to support kbin and Lemmy. If it doesn't support Lemmy right away, then it wouldn't help to register on a Lemmy instance, because Artemis still wouldn't support Lemmy.

You're right that you can't sign into a Lemmy instance with your kbin credentials. Each site is it's own site. If something is posted on lemmy.world, it sends a notice to kbin.social and kbin.social fetches the info and publishes it locally on kbin as well. Comments on the kbin post are sent back to lemmy.world. There's basically a copy of the post and comments on every server. Not every server will "know" about every other server though, so content could push across the entire federated network slowly sometimes.

[-] subignition@kbin.social 2 points 1 year ago

Hi, I'm participating from kbin.social.

Your account doesn't follow you across different websites, but rather you can see and interact with everything using your own instance as a window. (Except initial growing pains)

Because kbin.social and lemmy.world are federated, my local view of the thread is here

https://kbin.social/m/reddit@lemmy.world/t/124934/Lemmy-is-confusing-and-poorly-limited-How-does-Lemmy-work#comments

And on the other hand there's likely local pages for plenty of magazines (communities) on kbin from your perspective, too

[-] Kichae@kbin.social 2 points 1 year ago

You can build a website using WordPress. You can build a website using Joomla. You can build a website using Drupal. You can even use an RSS plugin to import posts from a Joomla blog into a totally different WordPress blog.

That is, in very simplified terms, what's going ok with kbin and Lemmy. You can build a content aggregator with Lemmy. You can build one with kbin. You can import content from one to another.

But they're different bits of software, and they have different 3rd party compatibilities.

[-] Otome-chan@kbin.social 1 points 1 year ago

"instance" is just a fancy name for "website". if you have an account on kbin.social you can't login to your kbin.social account on lemmy.world. it's like email. your gmail account can email a yahoo address, but you can't login to your gmail account from yahoo.

Some mobile apps exist to let you login to lemmy sites, but those won't work with your kbin account.

[-] jared@kbin.social 1 points 1 year ago

since kbin is just lemmy + mastodon it's been my main, but I got a lemmy account to check out the apps.

load more comments (3 replies)
[-] DrNeurohax@kbin.social 2 points 1 year ago

You didn't have to say you're new - the fact that you thought you could get banned for that post screams it! That's the good ole Reddit PTSD. Folks are more chill and friendly here. Also, maybe 5 people fully understand the system, so we're all learning.

One little bug that I think makes this whole situation more confusing is that not interacting with a thread for long enough (opening several tabs, walking away while ready comments, etc.), your browser could stop updating the state of the page. When you go to subscribe or comment or vote, you get hit with one of two errors. I had assumed that was part of this whole who-can-talk-to-who fediverse confusion. It's not. It's just a bug you can get around by refreshing the page.

As for combining posts, that's something in the works, but there's no karma and most people I've come across don't give two shits about the various bugged equivalents. If you're going to submit a post, check to see if it's already already being talked about on another instance. There's no etiquette for how to handle that yet, so I think it might make sense to just post a link to the federated post that that people in that subscribed magazine/community get directed to the larger discussion. Or maybe do this and say you want to talk about some specific aspect more.

And yes, there's lots under construction here, but nobody was prepared for this deluge. Seriously, from ~3,500 users between kbin and lemmy to ~2 million now. We know that the devs are hard at work, so it isn't like it's an abandoned project. But, I'll take this community over Reddit's any day.

[-] datavoid@kbin.social 1 points 1 year ago

Probably 2 million accounts, not 2 million users

[-] atocci@kbin.social 3 points 1 year ago

Account numbers are a bad metric due to bot account creation spam on bot instances. 116,000 active users, 2 million bots. Thankfully the bots have been mostly reduced to their own little defederated corner of lemmy at this point it seems.

[-] answersplease77@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

Thank you. Yes it's the future trust me. I'm loving every aspect of lemmy the more I'm learning about it. I already cannot go back to reddit power tripping mods and censorship. Now I understand how the fedverses are and 100% agree that's how things should be. I think it's the future of the internet. The internet has been infected with something called centlization and silicon vally greed. I watch more ads than videos when I use Twitch and Youtube. Twitter and Reddit coming up with more dictatorship laws and their only goals are IPO value and pleasing advertisers. People need to move away from these centrilized giants that stand for nothing but montization of user's data and greed.

[-] MystikIncarnate@lemmy.ca 1 points 1 year ago

I'll try to be brief here, but IDK.... It's a bit much to summarize without waving my hands around and saying "it's magic".

So, the first thing I want to explain is the idea behind federation. Federating (at least in technological terms) in the simplest way is a method to make someone's login work somewhere else, like when you log into a website or a retailers webpage and you can either make an account with them, or "login using" then options for another site like Google or Facebook (or Twitter, or something.... The list is long for what options might be there). If you make an account using your email, it's unique to that site, but if you log in with, say, your Facebook or Google account, your access is federated. Basically the site pushes you to a Google login, you do so and approve it, and Google gives your browser a token (inside a cookie), the browser takes that token, validates it with Google, who sends key details to uniquely identify you as the person who signed in.

Your login isn't with that site specifically, but it works for that site. You are a federated user.

Lemmy is federated among itself. While there's a ton of "clones" (which are actually instances of Lemmy), they are all federated together, so your login to Lemmy.ml or whatever, works for getting you access to Lemmy.world, and Lemmy.ca and on and on and on.

Unless an instance is defederated, which is to remove access from non-local accounts, your login to whatever instance you signed up for, will work across all Lemmy "clones" as you say.

On top of that, there's sync and sharing of communities among Lemmy instances, so if you want to browse a community from Lemmy.world on Lemmy.ml or something, and your .ml login is subscribed to it, then your local instance will retrieve a copy of the community from .world for you (and others in your local instance) to browse.... Those communities are still on the source Lemmy instance, and when you post, your comment is replicated back to the original instance where the community lives and as long as your federated login is permitted to do so, the post will appear for other users across all federated Lemmy instances.

This is a basic tenant of decentralisation, so if one instance dies for any reason, it can be stood back up and all content can be re-replicated to it.... All federated Lemmy instances can work together to make sure nothing is lost.

It's confusing, I know but it is what it is.

TL;DR: your local Lemmy login permits you access to all federated Lemmy servers (you don't need a login to each one you want to use), and your "home" server will facilitate any posts you make to other servers communities, and bring you the content from those servers.

load more comments
view more: next ›
this post was submitted on 01 Jul 2023
21 points (59.5% liked)

Reddit

17748 readers
87 users here now

News and Discussions about Reddit

Welcome to !reddit. This is a community for all news and discussions about Reddit.

The rules for posting and commenting, besides the rules defined here for lemmy.world, are as follows:

Rules


Rule 1- No brigading.

**You may not encourage brigading any communities or subreddits in any way. **

YSKs are about self-improvement on how to do things.



Rule 2- No illegal or NSFW or gore content.

**No illegal or NSFW or gore content. **



Rule 3- Do not seek mental, medical and professional help here.

Do not seek mental, medical and professional help here. Breaking this rule will not get you or your post removed, but it will put you at risk, and possibly in danger.



Rule 4- No self promotion or upvote-farming of any kind.

That's it.



Rule 5- No baiting or sealioning or promoting an agenda.

Posts and comments which, instead of being of an innocuous nature, are specifically intended (based on reports and in the opinion of our crack moderation team) to bait users into ideological wars on charged political topics will be removed and the authors warned - or banned - depending on severity.



Rule 6- Regarding META posts.

Provided it is about the community itself, you may post non-Reddit posts using the [META] tag on your post title.



Rule 7- You can't harass or disturb other members.

If you vocally harass or discriminate against any individual member, you will be removed.

Likewise, if you are a member, sympathiser or a resemblant of a movement that is known to largely hate, mock, discriminate against, and/or want to take lives of a group of people, and you were provably vocal about your hate, then you will be banned on sight.



Rule 8- All comments should try to stay relevant to their parent content.



Rule 9- Reposts from other platforms are not allowed.

Let everyone have their own content.



:::spoiler Rule 10- Majority of bots aren't allowed to participate here.

founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS