I started moving from Reddit to Lemmy a few days ago, and since then I've been forcing myself to spend time here and getting myself used to it. I quickly checked the list of popular instances and decided to join lemmy.world and not beehaw because I didn't like their decision of defederating other big lemmy instances.
I've been lurking lemmy.world for a bunch of days, and I like it enough not to look back at Reddit anymore, so props to that. It feels a bit chaotic though, with many tiny communities being created all the time with very few post and comments in them.
Today I decided to take a look at beehaw's and in perspective it feels so organized and content rich that I'm quite impressed.
I guess it comes with a big amount of moderation and organized content creation work and I wonder how sustainable is that in the long run, but props to them so far for the project!
So it seems like a pretty good community to replace the need for reddit, but they apparently require an application to join. I'm not sure what the criteria is, but they rejected my request to join without giving a reason.
There seems to be a bug in the application system right now, where the reason for rejection isn't delivered to the applicant. So they may not be at fault here.
Yeah, it ultimately doesn't matter why, I just didn't realize these communities were so closed-off. Makes navigating a post-reddit reality pretty frustrating.
Is the application to create an account, or to subscribe to their communities? If it’s the former, it seems like it would be better to create an account with some other instance that they’re still federated with.
Well I said that I wanted to move from reddit out of protest, I am interested in exploring their communities, and that I generally don't post but I vote and comment occasionally.
So they either have terrible judgement to think of me as a bot or spammer, or there is some other reason. I mean, that's their prerogative, but it is discouraging.
This doesn't seem true to me. I put my application reason as (very close to): "To share my personality and views." And I was rejected. While I'm not bitter, since they can do what they want, that doesn't seem very bot or spammy to me.