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So confused! Lol

I know this will take some time to get used to, but I am using the Voyager app. I am confused on what local communities in comparison to the federate communities.

I’m also not sure why there are so many different apps for Lemmy because now I feel like I should be checking them all out, but Voyager is very similar to Apollo for Reddit so I feel most comfortable here.

What is an instance?

And how long will I be able to share photos? Since my account is one day old I can’t upload any pictures.

I’ll have more questions, but I can’t think of them right now, thanks in advance!

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  • Reddit is a single website, made up of a collection of (link and post sharing) subreddits, each with its own moderators, policies and content preferences, but with one overall admin team who work for one overall boss, u/spez, with one overall aim - to make money from user generated content.

    The creators of lemmy felt that the profit motive was actively harmful for this type of website, and decided to remove the single, powerful, profit-motivated owner model, so...

    Lemmy is a collection of websites all running the same open source software, that globally shares (federates) all the user generated content, each website (instance) has a (local) collection of (link and post sharing) communities, each with their own moderators, policies and content preferences, but each lemmy website has their own admin or admin team, who are generally just the tech folk who decided set up the website (instance) and run it, so instead of one overall agenda that reddit has, you have many overall agendas.

    Of course this sets up the possibility that different instances disagree with each other (what should count as nsfw, what's acceptable speech, what's acceptable moderation, which type of politics is unacceptable), and instances disagreeing definitely happens, but that's kind of by-design to prevent one set of admins from controlling all of lemmy. Some of them defederate (stop sharing with) some of the others.

    As far as I can tell, the money to run the computers on which the instances run is usually crowd sourced from (a minority of) the users themselves. Small instances are just run in people's spare computers at home, I think. Anyone can download the software and make a new instance, again by design.

  • Welcome!

    Here is a post we made recently for new users, and it has links to some guides (infographic style)

    https://lemmy.ca/post/39167034

    The 'detailed guide on how Lemmy works' goes over the local vs federated communities, and I think the visuals help with understanding that

    There's also a guide for the apps, but the short answer is that there are so many apps because it's very easy to make them. It's all open and the platform is designed to make it easy to connect to. My advice is to stick to whichever app you feel comfortable with, and then if there is a feature you're looking for then you can post about it in !lemmyapps@lemmy.world. That way either someone can tell you about an app that has what you want, or the various developers will get your feedback and start working on implementing it.

    As for what an instance is, see the 'quick overview of the fediverse' guide.

    For photos, I'm not familiar with lemm.ee's policies but it could be a bug? We don't have as much of the "account must be X days old to participate" type stuff here. You can also always upload to Imgur or Catbox and link the image.

    Edit: my bad, I see the note about lemm.ee's image policy. The Imgur thing should work in the meantime

    Hopefully that helps, and I'm happy to answer any follow-up questions :) Especially if there's something confusing with the guides, so that we can improve them

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