this post was submitted on 10 Jun 2023
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Asklemmy
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I think the fracturing of communities will sort itself out with time.
Even within reddit there has always been multiple communities per niche before one floats to the top.
I think the main issue with that is reducing the barrier between instances so that its easier for people to find the large communities
I agree with this. I'm not worried about that fracturing because it's also pretty common on reddit. IE: the r/nba sub alone has more than a couple of spin-off subs.
The difference is that you can just sub to them all easily and get all their content. It's much harder on the Fediverse because you need to go to a lot more effort to do so and there is a lot of junk communities with few posts out there. There are also complete nutjobs running some of them that you ordinarily wouldn't want to interact with either.
Now if there was a clean, easy and fast way to sift though all the crud across multiple servers at once that would make a huge difference.
I don't see a lot of difference in terms of effort in searching for communities between here and reddit. I'm on Jerboa and I tried searching "teachnology" and "science." The communities with the same and similar names popped up. That's how I did it when I first got here and that's how I do it in reddit. If I wanted to, say, join an anime sub all I have to do is search (for example) anime then tap the sub. There's a huge subscribe button ther (I just tried it since I'm nkt subbed to that yet).
I have't come across crazy mods/admins yet so I can't comment on that. Which subs have them?