Oh, I just use #hashtags on my posts to make them easily #searchable. So someone looking to see what people are saying about collections can search “#collections” and find my post.
Well, after messing around a little, Kbin seems to be able to do both. I can #follow your PeerTube #user or #subscribe to your #channel. Interestingly, PeerTube seems to allow you to create multiple channels under a username which is kinda similar to Kbin’s #collections or Mastodon’s #lists.
Yeah, I just wanted to specify it isn’t a mass comment kind of thing.
#Kbin has a #feature to kind of deal with this called #collections. Instead of subscribing to all #magazines of a same type or even name, you can put them in a collection (or find a collection where somebody already did that) and then favorite that collection see all of those magazines in your feed. Splitting up the discussion is still not ideal but at least this lets you see all of it at once and increases #discoverability.
#Kbin actually handles this really well. Whenever it detects 2 of the same #thread (at least that’s how I think it works), it’ll group them and only show one of the threads on your feed. If you click on it, right under the thread will be the other #cross-posted threads on other magazines, each of which has its own upvote/downvote and comment count. You can click on any of those threads to switch to a certain magazine’s thread and see the #comments there. Also, when you comment, it only goes to the thread you currently have open.
Can you actually #access PeerTube #content from other #instances? As a Kbin user, I can see both Lemmy threads and Mastodon microblogs and I know Mastodon users can tag Lemmy (and maybe also Kbin) magazines to make threads there. Is there a way to interact with PeerTube like that?
I’d highly recommend it. The dev has been on an #improvement rampage lately. The future of the project seems bright.
I’m not sure but signing away any moral rights seems so dystopian.
From what I understand, the copyright is exclusively Reddit’s.
Nobody in this thread seems to have mentioned #Kbin. It’s an instance that aims to combine the #microblog structure of instances like Mastodon with the thread structure of instances like Lemmy.
Yeah but mail isn’t perfectly defining services either since last I checked FedEx didn’t let you share links.
Isn’t that more akin to instances having “social” in their name?
I use a Chrome extension that’s been discontinued so probably not.
Isn’t YTMP3 just illegal?
Kbin actually does let you look at and browse microblogs as well as threads.