Are we sticking to communities?
Are we sticking to communities?
Afaik "community" is the intended Lemmy term.
If we want to mature and be our own thing it's also a good idea to separate ourselves from Reddit, otherwise Lemmy will always be considered a "Reddit clone" (even though it technically started as one and still is).
I was specifically referring to Lemmy, not the ActivityPub protocol in general.
Lemmy is a Reddit clone the same way as PixelFed is an Instagram clone, Mastodon is a Twitter clone and PeerTube is a YouTube clone.
I don't use "clone" as a derogatory term, there's nothing wrong with getting inspired by other sites and implementing something better.
Since this is the "fediverse", it makes much more sense to use general terms than things specific to a platform. There's already /kbin, and there may be other link aggregator software platforms that appear in the future, and having a standardised set of vocabulary that all platforms can use makes it much easier for everyone to understand.
/kbin calls them magazines and there's sometimes been some confusion over the term and Lemmy having communities, even though they are the same thing. All the microblogging platforms on the fediverse for example just have "posts" and "boosts", there is no specific term for them like "tweets" on Twitter (there was the "toot" thing for Mastodon for a while, but it was quickly rolled back and hasn't been official for several years).
Don't forget that when you post on Lemmy, you're not posting "to Lemmy", you're posting to the wider "fediverse".
Kbin magazines combine a ActivityPub Group ( what a Lemmy calls a "community") with a hashtag search, so they are a bit different than what's on Lemmy.
I just don't know that anyone's actually using the hashtag feed on kbin.