Would be helpful for most new users to understand how Lemmy works and how the different hosts interact with each other in a basic way.
Would be helpful for most new users to understand how Lemmy works and how the different hosts interact with each other in a basic way.
Interesting, do you think this approach will limit how big Lemmy can get? For example, if a server wanted to subscribe to ten communities that are the size of large subreddits, how much data would that be? How much would it cost to maintain a server that could handle that?
Only text is mirrored, images and video are hosted on the instance where they were posted, so overall it’s really cheap to store all of that, and even more so if the load is distributed across many instances.
Generally speaking, text is cheap to transmit and store. It’s images and video that could be a real issue.
But ultimately, content on small instances may end up being somewhat ephemeral. Developers and admins may want to look into ways to earmark significant posts so that they don’t end up in the dustbin, but 90%+ of what gets posted to social media isn’t actually worth saving long term anyway.