To see the original discussion, you can see this thread: https://lemmy.ca/post/8488573

To open the post on your instance you can go to [email protected] and see the recent top posts, or use an app/frontend/ browser extension (ex. [email protected])

Alternatively, here is the screenshot from the post.


I also wanted to share this tip for how you can filter for Lemmy posts when searching:

  • Search using site:home_instance. So if I wanted to find recommended phones, I could go site:lemmy.ca recommended phones. Since every instance has its own collection of posts, you will be getting results from all over Lemmy. The limitation is that you won’t see content from instances that aren’t federated with yours, but you probably didn’t want to see that stuff anyway since you picked your instance for a reason. You can also put any instance into the search if you wanted different results.

Question to everyone, what does Lemmy need to make it easier for people to find content? What are the implications of the Fediverse on how people might find content in the future?

One thing is that people are more likely to get posts from the larger instances, likely because more people are linking to them and opening those links? Another thought was the common complaint about how our post links aren’t community specific. While I can search for posts using the method above, I can’t search within a specific community like I can with Reddit (ex. I can’t search site:lemmy.ca/c/Vancouver recommended restaurants

EDIT: The issues for it are here, looks like the devs are good with it now and someone just needs to implement it:

  • @Daft_ish
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    -711 months ago

    Honestly, I’d rather it not. Just accelerates the social media platform life cycle. Any other search engine. Google, no thanks.

    • OtterOP
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      11 months ago

      I don’t see how a site can choose which search engine it appears on

      Also this feels like the elitist “I don’t want the NORMIES on my site, only I know what’s best”

      • katy ✨
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        11 months ago

        technically most crawlers abide by robots.txt so if you really wanted you could forbid the google crawler but it would be silly to since it’s one of the most popular engines

        • OtterOP
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          111 months ago

          Interesting, didn’t know that thanks :)

      • @Daft_ish
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        -311 months ago

        I don’t know. How about the millions of sites that don’t appear in a Google search. Do what they did.

        • OtterOP
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          211 months ago

          Which would make it so it doesn’t appear in any search, which is also what Reddit is considering doing

          Now THAT would be speedrunning the enshittification. Just DRM Lemmy

          • @Daft_ish
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            11 months ago

            Lol as if Google isn’t the leader in enshitification.