this post was submitted on 01 Jun 2023
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Asklemmy
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I think this is currently one of the biggest problem of Lemmy on the UX department. Non technical users from Reddit will only expect one "subreddit" for a theme, but if they search on Lemmy, they'll find more than one community with the same topic, and it'll confuse them and make them less likely to come back.
But that's the way how Fediverse work, so I don't think combining two communities should be done from the Fediverse side, but rather each Lemmy instance can curate a "playlist" or "multireddit" that has some of the biggest communities from the users' server and other federated servers about the same topic, and users can subscribe to the "playlist" rather than individual community.
Eh, reddit really isn't much better in this department. It's not uncommon for multiple subs to exist for the same userbase (r/memes vs r/dankmemes, r/christian vs r/truechristian). Over time users figure out which is which, which is the main one, and which is for them
True, but they are all with different names, and they are not completely the same (as in different rules, more specific topic vs general topic, etc). But on Lemmy there is a possibility that two communities having the same exact topic and name for example [email protected] and [email protected], they are both discussing technology (and not any specific difference between them).
@SafetyGoggles The difference between those two is the moderation policies of the instance. Beehaw doesn't federate with the same instances that lemmy.ml does, and has an explicitly more inclusive and less generalist approach. They both cover the same ground, but you couldn't just merge them.
Having said that, it would be nice to see a user level feature that lets end users combine communities in to one "virtual" community in their interface.
@g7s @DudePluto
The down side of that would probably be duplicated content. Like if some major news happens for a topic reposts can already be really annoying and usually need moderator action to combine threads. Then there'd be that times however many communities exist for that same topic.
Yep, that's exactly what I mean. Coverung the same ground, but they are different communities with different moderation, so it can't be merged, but it make sense to group them together and view it as a "playlist". Just like Whitney Houston and ABBA don't collaborate to make albums, but it make sense for their songs to exist together in a playlist called "Songs from the 80s".