The option to create a community is right up on top of my screen. That implies to me that it’s a thing any of us can just do. I’m new here, though, and I don’t wanna make a faux pas or whatever. I have questions.
- Is there accepted etiquette around who creates a community or when?
- How general-interest should communities on midwest.social remain?
- Might creating more communities right now exacerbate the high CPU usage problems in any way?
It’s probably actually impressive how little I know about subreddit moderation, to say nothing of Lemmy community moderation. I just don’t want to incessantly ask things of a small number of people during an anomalous influx of instance traffic that’s probably already demanding enough.
Which… I guess is what this post is. Woof. Sorry. Just wanna be a good citizen!
I just created a community I could not find amongst some of the top instances (synthesizers). I am ok with moderating which is important because if you create a community you are a mod for that community. @seahorse@midwest.social might have more thoughts on this topic.
I’m pretty sure I’d be bad at it, but I decided today that I’m willing to try stuff. If people really do come here in significant numbers, the way to demonstrate that this is a viable community worth staying in is to have options for folks.
However, I know how new and enthusiastic people can fuck shit up despite good intentions. I don’t believe that I’d do that, but I’m sure nobody thinks that about themselves. Idk what the ramifications would be of a dozen of us frenetically recreating reddit spaces here and then ghosting. Again, I don’t think I’ll do that! But still…