this post was submitted on 12 Jun 2023
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I know a few of these and can speculate a bit on the others to try to give an answer before someone else replies.
I believe that they just disappear so you want to be sure to choose a home instance you expect to stick around. In the long term if Lemmy develops a way to "link" communities between instances then it would be a way to prevent communities from disappearing in those cases.
Yes they can have the same username but for your home instance you see the name like "gamer_guy123" without the @lemmy.world but on another instance they would be "gamer_[email protected]". Just like how email works they can have the same username but the domain is different.
An instance will limit the number of registrations to keep the bandwidth costs down. A lot of these people hosting are hobbyists but believe strongly that Lemmy is the future and are covering the costs which with limited registrations would not be massively expensive. I do wonder how much storage is required though.
A corporate could spin up a Lemmy instance which would likely be a more stable home instance. Since Lemmy is federated though all the activity can be synced between instances and each instance would be able to control their API so the corporate could lock down the API potentially but other instances would still be able to use their APIs. The concern I would have here is that a single Lemmy instance becomes a walled garden and doesn't federate. That would give them the same control as Reddit. It's up to users to make sure not to centralize under one instance.
Your home server can block instances if desired. It's important to have a home instance with a policy you agree with. For lemmy.world you can see the list here: https://lemmy.world/instances right now there is only 1 blocked instance.
Hope this helps!
Thanks for answering.
With the username thing. I've not yet seen any @ after anyone's name so far? It's just their username.
I guess the intention is to have like 1000 different instances each hosting a small number of users and being federated with each other?
I think centralisation is kind of human nature though. If there's a big walled garden that has all the content then people will keep joining. And what about an instance that's initially run well then later becomes walled. All the content could just be lost to those on other instances? That doesn't fill me with confidence about the longevity of a community.
It's pretty confusing that it's said to not worry too much about which instance to make your home instance but it actually seems to matter a lot since you could be accidentally part of a walled garden or a small server that is likely to disappear.
Each account has a username and an optional display name. If the account has a display name, that's what you see. If the account doesn't have a display name, you see their username. If they are on the same instance as you, the instance is omitted from the username (in the UI, anyway).