Added. Thanks!
Added. Thanks!
I tried to look up Tumblr’s present and past Alexa rankings, but it turns out that Alexa was closed last year.
My hope is that federation will be a good solution to these issues. Users can choose a home instance based on the types of content they do or don’t want to see. Instances with conflicting focuses or policies can defederate from one another.
My hope is that this is a shift back to a more decentralized internet.
They’ve officially branched out to Lemmy: [email protected]
All posts must be a request for advice.
Hope this rule gets applied to posts that pretend to be looking for advice but are really just seeking validation. People complain about the advice always being to break up, but IMO this is the bigger issue which keeps me away from all of the advice subreddits.
I can’t remember anything wildly wrong. Closest I came to that was from a private tutor my parents had to hire to make up for too many days I missed due to health problems one semester. One day when we were covering evolutionary biology she goes, “Well, I don’t believe in this, but I’m obligated to teach it to you.” Doesn’t inspire a lot of confidence, but I appreciate the candor. Also I remember a girl in my class in middle school saying her grandmother believed dinosaur bones were put there by the devil and the teacher had to give an awkward response to that.
There is one common misconception among English teachers that I think everyone has heard at some point, the difference between “effect” and “affect” being different parts of speech.
Sounds like that teacher was a “sovereign citizen”.
The subreddits I moderate are all quite small (about 2-5k subscribers) and on relatively obscure topics. For now the Lemmy communities I’ve started are on pretty broad, general topics. I’ll consider official moves for them if the Lemmy userbase gets big enough or if Reddit really does die.
I am ſo pleaſed they ſtopped uſing theſe.
Several (attempted) murderers have owned copies of The Catcher in the Rye.