The post on the rules got me thinking about this.

The need to have some form of an understanding of decentralised systems is a slight downfall to the fediverse concept, in my opinion. Just signing up can be confusing for a start as people generally don’t want to think further than providing an email to log into whatever is being served. People certainly do not want to think about how they conduct themselves without bots and algorithms moderating them. This is probably not our average reddit user I’m talking about here. I think Reddit has somewhat prepared it’s subscribers in that we are now used to sub instances, moderated by (mostly)humans, within a single server instance. Hence the migration here. Now, let’s do multiple server instances all over the world, all intertwined, with multiple layers of regulations dependant on the server you are posting on et cetera?.. could be a bit of a brain full. Kind of sounds like I had to google my way into this community, right?

So here we are, just a few, who made it over. I don’t know whether it was just my subs, but I always had a strong feeling of a big SA presence on Reddit. Some good, some bad. Nonetheless, I would love to get the best of the South African presence from reddit here. Does anyone feel that way, and if so, what are your thoughts on how we can make this move easier for our fellow war heros lost on read-only reddit?

  • spinaasie
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    1 year ago

    I agree.

    The thing is, I think there is a risk associated with it though. But with all thing related to love and war the truth gets mixed in with the deception.

    Reddit permanently bans account of user advocating Lemmy migration, and bans r/LemmyMigration

    there is a starting guide pinned at the top of lemmy.world
    Starting guide

    I think the strategy would be to just get them an account and figure it out from that point otherwise they get disoriented with information

    step 1 - join lemmy.world
    step 2 - join south africa
    step 3 - say hi and we can help from there

    something like that?

    • @dynamicpersonOP
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      31 year ago

      Absolutely agree. Those steps will be the best guide. Personally, I would sacrifice my account for a permaban. However, they will just delete the content, making it quite futile. It’s quite ridiculous if you think about it.

      Anyways, I do think it might be easier when the mobile apps starts getting a little less buggy, and that can take a while. I can’t speak for all of them, but I use Mlem at this stage, and as basic as it is, it’s really promising. I think that if it get’s structured properly, with literally just those 3 steps you mention, and nothing more technical, it’ll be a no brainer. Open up a join “wizard” when you open the app. That’s up to the devs though. Perhaps it’s just a bit of a waiting game for such things to catch up a bit.

      • spinaasie
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        31 year ago

        Androids Jerboa works nicely…

        I thought of a possible workaround. Perhaps doing all the text in a nice info graphic and then not using any of those keywords in your title. I can promise you the 1st or second comment will be “what is lemmy?” or some stupid sheeet like that.

        On the same note I don’t think they care so much about the little subs. I can be wrong