This is a problem I see all over Lemmy. I’ll find communities and think “Oh cool!” but then notice the last post is from a year ago. Then I’ll notice they have like 24 subscribers. Then I’ll notice they only have one mod who hasn’t posted ANYTHING ANYWHERE in 1 year.
So I give up on that community, despite being interested in the content. With that said, I’m NOT interested in sim racing. Unless this is somehow a community about the Maxis game The Sims, from 24 years ago, and someone made a way for them to go racing. THAT would be awesome.
Then I’ll notice they only have one mod who hasn’t posted ANYTHING ANYWHERE in 1 year.
So I give up on that community, despite being interested in the content.
Not sure why that is a reason to give up. Most admins are happy to swap out AWOL mods for active ones. It wouldn’t hurt to shoot them a message and ask.
We have mechanisms for transferring sub ownership, so once the community is made, any individual can bring it back to life with some effort. It’s really just a population thing though, we’re not quite big enough to support really niche interests yet.
It’s also a small issue of people thinking that other people will grow their communities for them, in a sort of “if you build it, they will come” mentality. This is false 99% of the time, and only works if you’re arriving at just the right time to spin up a community that there is a huge amount of demand for. Almost all communities are built off of months of regular, dedicated posting by a single individual though, which is usually the creator.
Anyways though, this’ll resolve in time if the service continues to grow over the years.
This is false 99% of the time, and only works if you’re arriving at just the right time to spin up a community that there is a huge amount of demand for. Almost all communities are built off of months of regular, dedicated posting by a single individual though, which is usually the creator.
@squirrel@discuss.tchncs.de
The post on !simracing@lemmy.ml got a few comments: https://sopuli.xyz/post/18211534
The mod hasn’t said anything, I’m not sure they are even active on Lemmy anymore.
What do you think we should do?
This is a problem I see all over Lemmy. I’ll find communities and think “Oh cool!” but then notice the last post is from a year ago. Then I’ll notice they have like 24 subscribers. Then I’ll notice they only have one mod who hasn’t posted ANYTHING ANYWHERE in 1 year.
So I give up on that community, despite being interested in the content. With that said, I’m NOT interested in sim racing. Unless this is somehow a community about the Maxis game The Sims, from 24 years ago, and someone made a way for them to go racing. THAT would be awesome.
Not sure why that is a reason to give up. Most admins are happy to swap out AWOL mods for active ones. It wouldn’t hurt to shoot them a message and ask.
We have mechanisms for transferring sub ownership, so once the community is made, any individual can bring it back to life with some effort. It’s really just a population thing though, we’re not quite big enough to support really niche interests yet.
It’s also a small issue of people thinking that other people will grow their communities for them, in a sort of “if you build it, they will come” mentality. This is false 99% of the time, and only works if you’re arriving at just the right time to spin up a community that there is a huge amount of demand for. Almost all communities are built off of months of regular, dedicated posting by a single individual though, which is usually the creator.
Anyways though, this’ll resolve in time if the service continues to grow over the years.
Very true
That’s the issue we are trying to solve here.
I remember you were interesting in model trains, correct? !modelmakers@lemmy.ml could be interesting to you
I honestly don’t know. The whole instance politics discussion is too complicated to comprehend.
Based on the 200 comments on that thread (https://discuss.tchncs.de/post/23836769) there seems to be quite a few people who block or do not participate on lemmy.ml communities
Moving the community elsewhere seems like an opportunity.
Hopefully that’s more clear.