The last time I encountered a power trip mod, I created another community on the same topic, brought other people who were unsatisfied over, and the new community is much more active than the initial one.
It takes quite a while though.
The last time I encountered a power trip mod, I created another community on the same topic, brought other people who were unsatisfied over, and the new community is much more active than the initial one.
It takes quite a while though.
Great, thank you ! 🙏
!football@lemmy.world for people interested in football
Makes sense! How many people are usually active on your communities, per week for instance?
You do you!
They have been out for 12 days, hope is quite low
Thank you for jumping in and providing this context!
Probably an opportunity for consolidation
Thank you for your comment. I really like the !floatingisfun one, it looks even better with the custom CSS!
Indeed, thanks!
9 has been updated (the original one is “no link to Reddit”), but 3 is indeed funny
There is !fixing@slrpnk.net, maybe you can promote your community there?
Interesting list, thanks!
Stumbled upon it randomly the other day, it’s pretty cool!
Me too at first ha ha
Always interesting to see lemmy.ml slur filter at work
Thanks for sharing!
The last one is cute, but last post seems to be from 23 days ago
Spanish-speaking communities
So isn’t there something in between local and federated - i.e. saved by the instance as user-settings, but not pushed to other instances?
My understanding was closer to this one.
For instance in my case, it would be something like https://reddthat.com/u/Blaze/multicommunity1, but that wouldn’t get federated to other instances
Yes, but at the same time, it depends on the instance policy as a whole.
Some instance admins prefer to not interfere with how mods handle their communities (which is also a valid stance, I’m not criticizing it), but that means that in the end it wouldn’t have that much impact. And most of the users wouldn’t probably see the posts in the support community.