Most people default to the main server. It's easier that way. A major weakness of Lemmy is how if I use the main URL of another instance, it will say I'm not logged in, and I have to cut and paste a parameter and paste it onto the end of Lemmy.world to gain access. It's kind of annoying so since most of the main action is on Lemmy.world, I prefer to make an account here and stay within this instance as much as I can.
rimlogger
Dude it was set up less than three weeks ago by volunteers and is funded by donations. It is what it is. Even commercial websites can feel slow under load, that's just how the Internet works.
I mean... this sort of attitude you have is kind of self-defeating, no? Like let the /r/Android mods have their own community. These public spats make it confusing for end users. The fediverse doesn't have to be one big happy family - people have freedom to associate with some communities and not others. Duplication is bound to happen in the early days of this fediverse thing.
Eh, I can see that, but the whole point of the fediverse is to get away from centralization, right? I think it's a good thing they are promoting their own instance on Lemmy. Only issue is that for right now at least - all of the instances look the same...
Well when they defederated, that's why I decided to make an account on Lemmy.world too.
They still get to moderate /r/android. In the old times of discrete message board communities, there were various Android message board communities before everything started coalescing around Reddit. It's impossible to have an opportunity to moderate every single community. If they want to create their own duplicate community, they are free to do so.
Can you explain what the controversy is about? So the /r/Android mods tried to start an Android community on the fediverse but other people got to them first? How are they astroturfing?
Time will tell. Lemmy needs more users and more content. Feels like Reddit from the late 2000s right now. The demographic is mostly male/tech-literate and the only threads that get responses are tech and gaming subjects.
I see your point but there have been community-run message boards funded by donations in the past. I doubt Lemmy will replicate Reddit's scale.