this post was submitted on 03 Nov 2024
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Fediverse

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I used to primarily use Instagram for following illustrators, sculptors, digital artists, etc., but I dropped Insta for obvious reasons.

There was also a large exodus from Insta to Cara.app almost a year ago due to Meta's stupid policies on using Insta content to train AI. While Cara is generally a great site and has anti-AI policies (I'm not anti-AI, just anti the way most companies implement AI), my problem with Cara is that it's an owner funded site that will inevitably need to find a way to monetize the content/users.

On the Fediverse, I'm on Lemmy, Mastodon (though I don't love the micro-blog format), and Pixelfed (very little activity).

So my question is: What platforms in the Fediverse are you seeing the most original artist content?

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[–] feb@loma.ml 7 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

A project in the Fediverse is not an encapsulated unit. Therefore, each project is potentially the right one to create and distribute content and all others are able to receive and display the content.

[–] anticonnor@lemmy.world 1 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) (1 children)

Could you expand on that? If I were looking for federated platforms that get a lot of activity from artists posting their work, what would you recommend?

[–] feb@loma.ml 2 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

The short version: It doesn't matter if you use Lemmy, Mastodon, Friendica or any other platform to participate in the Fediverse.

The Fediverse is an open stream of data (writing, images, videos, geodata, etc.) and all projects in the Fediverse can receive this data stream.

There is a certain degree of specialisation in order to better meet certain challenges. For example, you can easily share long videos with Peertube. Pixelfed specialises in the sharing of images and Lemmy in the aggregation of links.

There are also sites such as Mastodon, which specialises in microblogs, or Friendica, with which you can write long content and structure the content with Markdown or BBCode.

This content is created with Friendica, for example. So I don't use Lemmy. Nevertheless, they can see the content and we can interact with each other. This is because our software, which we have used to log in, is connected to each other via the same data stream. Only our front end looks different.

But this also means that with your Lemmy account, you can receive all the content if it is available in the data stream. Enter a few hashtags that you would like to be displayed. When posts with this hashtag are published, you should be able to find this content in your personal timeline.

[–] aasatru@kbin.earth 9 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

Sadly not entirely accurate for Lemmy, as it does not display content from other platforms (except comments or posts from mbin, piefed, etc) unless a Lemmy community is explicitly tagged. You cannot follow mastodon or Pixelfed user from Lemmy in any meanjngful way.

[–] feb@loma.ml 1 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

Thanks for the hint. I do know Lemmy, but not in the depth that is required ;)

[–] aasatru@kbin.earth 5 points 2 weeks ago

Always happy to see Friendica users around - it seems to integrate impressively with huge parts of the Fediverse.

I remember reading about it in the early days of the project, and not giving it a shot because there's just no way any of my social graph would come with me there. Checking in now and then through the years it always seemed like an odd corner of the Internet. It's really cool to me that I suddenly find myself seamlessly interacting with its users, both anonymously here and with my full name on Mastodon.