It’s my hope to see unity and cohesion is the Lemmy-verse. Looks like [email protected] has over 39k subscribers.

Is there a way that this same conversation can “merge” with that one so that this one can be archived there?

How are Lemmy instances coping with two great ideas that might have come up at the same time but one has a lot more traction?

And true story: I’m not trying to start anything. I’m sincerely trying to promote Lemmy and perfect it — this would just be sanding the edges?

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    11 year ago

    I only filter by subbed and (to not miss) also wanna see all the tech news I can get so I will sub to multiple.
    I would like a design like crossposting but instead of either or the other make it a feature.

    With your feedback in my mind I’d propose this idea:
    Share the discussion as a user to another community like crossposting. As a visitor/browser of the communitx it was posted on, you can now set a switch to either see all content discussed by all communities in one post (and somehow federated to all other instances) or filter by a specific one because one instance is always the toxic one.
    If a mods decides it doesnt fit, he doesnt delete/take down the post but instead defederates the instance from this one post.
    With that design it should combat spam posting the same post as it can’t be spoofed.
    It would also respect user blocked instances.

    Sort of a federated post in the fediverse.
    I don’t know how that would be solved in lemmy nor the fediverse protocol but it sounds plausible as a standout feature.

    • SSTF
      link
      21 year ago

      I don’t design or implement features, but sure on a user end I’m sure there are many possibilities for fine tuning. I understand the desire to make a feed act just a certain way, I had used Apollo for Reddit and heavily taken advantage of its filter and organization features.

      I don’t think that level of streamlining should be the default on the federation level, as OP mused by merging the communities themselves. The existence of duplicate communities is a feature of federation.