I recently made a community, !celeste@lemmy.ca. The community can be seen from this instance, but isn’t accessible from other ones.
For example, if I go to https://lemmy.one/c/celeste@lemmy.ca , I get an error.
Is there some requirement communities have to reach before they appear on other instances? Is this a bug?
Sorry if the answer is obvious or has been asked before, but I couldn’t find any info on this.
Something that kind of bothers me about this way of doing it (even though I understand it’s probably a performance or otherwise concern) is that it means that users from other instances can’t see older top posts on a community just because a user from their instance hadn’t joined up until some point.
That seems kinda like it’s a second-class experience for anyone on a different instance unless I’m missing something.
The solution I guess is creating an account on the other instance if you want to see all the older top posts, but then you’re starting to make accounts on multiple instances which is not my personal preference.
Just thinking out loud. I’m curious if anyone else feels the same way.
Yes, exactly that. It’s to enable smaller servers to exist without having to download every post & comment from every community on every instance (including some troll spam communities that would inevitably spring up if it was done this way), filling the storage and immediately dying.
Ideal setup atm is lots of mid-sized instances, especially if grouped by interest. If 1 person or 10,000 people are subscribed to the same community, it’s the same footprint. It’s actually a relatively efficient way of doing things.
Best workaround yet is lemmy.directory. It’s a bot instance that just subscribes to every community it can find.
Signups disabled so the server doesn’t explode xDThey’ve enabled signups? The absolute madlads.Ahhh I see. That makes sense.
I guess a bunch of big severs downloading everything from smaller servers would also create an issue too just like the other way around huh?
Yeah, pretty much, except for the fact that big servers are more likely to have the hardware to deal with it.