

For example, https://lemmy.world/c/technology, https://lemmy.zip/c/technology, and https://piefed.social/c/technology coexist. Thats what the author meant with “community separation”.


For example, https://lemmy.world/c/technology, https://lemmy.zip/c/technology, and https://piefed.social/c/technology coexist. Thats what the author meant with “community separation”.


you’re right, definitely something I hadn’t really thought about. I just don’t get the sense that some communities are intentionally spread across different instances. Like there are two Plex communities on two separate instances that basically talk about the same stuff. I guess it’s just part of getting used to things, and it throws me off a bit since I’m still new to the fediverse.


thanks again. understanding everthing a bit better now :)


got it now. thanks for explaining. So this works for all crossposts, same url posts, and i can combine different communities together myself? not sure about the las part.


I used Mlem in this case. I can open the link just fine on the Web UI. What exactly am I looking at there? Sorry for asking stupid questions. I really like Lemmy and the whole idea of the Fediverse so far, I’m just trying to understand more of it.


I can’t follow this link while logged in to my account from feddit.org—is that what you’re saying? Piefed allows it, others not (yet, from what I’ve read and understood).


done that already. :) but it looks like this only works for url-posts, which Mlem already handled pretty good before.


Got any links or docs where I can read up on that?


how exactly? isn’t piefed “just” another instance in the fediverse?
do you know any client that supports this?