• SuperSleuth@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    Federation addresses the cost of large scale hosting by allowing smaller severs (with less users) to connect and form a greater whole. While a flagship Lemmy instance will form and likely already has with .world, in an ideal world users are spread across variety of different instances. In an even more ideal, different topics will have their own instances and general purpose ones are secondary. If you want anime you to to lemmyime, if you want recipes you to lemmecipes. Not, if you want anime and recipes go to lemmy.world. Essentially you want to spread the burden as evenly as possible.

    With instances closing, as it stands you lose your account and all things tied to it. Lemmy is still new and I image this will be addressed with something like account migration. So for now, don’t get too attached to any singular account. I’ve recently switched my browsing from lemmy.world to lemm.ee, but remember I still have access to all content from lemmy.world and other instances (addressing your point about more content and engagement).

    It’s perfectly fine to use large instances, they’re likely to have solid footing. Just know theirs going to be growing pains as Reddit becomes more shite. Donate if you can.

    • Unislash@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Gotcha. Thanks for the insight. I’m definitely curious to see how well the “donate to keep the lights on” model works out. It’s likely that the people joining right now are passionate and enough are willing to donate, but we’ll see if that trend works out. I think it could, with the more specific instances. Probably people are more willing to foot the bill for a topic they are passionate about, rather than for a bigger, more general instance. Anyway, we’ll see!

    • Unislash@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Ah, one follow up question about instances closing: what happens to the content that originates from that instance? Poof? Or does the federation model preserve it somehow?