It’s it’s own platform, but there’s other platforms that cross talk and are all one for the end user.
It’s basically reddits within reddits within reddits all communicating with eachother. There is a connect point between them, the individual instances, and they are ran by people willing to do so, they control the flow of communication based on the communities needs, in theory.
The best explanation I’ve seen is that federation is like email. If you have Gmail and send an email to a Hotmail address, a copy of the message is stored on both servers. When the Hotmail address replies, both servers are updated with the Hotmail’s contents. If you reply all to your own message, both servers are updated with Gmail’s contents. If Hotmail ever decided to refuse Gmail messages, Gmail would retain all the previous Hotmail content that had been sent.
Contrast this with Reddit, where they control everything in all communities.
I was looking the jerboa page and it called Lemmy a “federated” alternative to Reddit. What does federated mean in this context?
It’s it’s own platform, but there’s other platforms that cross talk and are all one for the end user.
It’s basically reddits within reddits within reddits all communicating with eachother. There is a connect point between them, the individual instances, and they are ran by people willing to do so, they control the flow of communication based on the communities needs, in theory.
The best explanation I’ve seen is that federation is like email. If you have Gmail and send an email to a Hotmail address, a copy of the message is stored on both servers. When the Hotmail address replies, both servers are updated with the Hotmail’s contents. If you reply all to your own message, both servers are updated with Gmail’s contents. If Hotmail ever decided to refuse Gmail messages, Gmail would retain all the previous Hotmail content that had been sent.
Contrast this with Reddit, where they control everything in all communities.
A greedy company can’t block your access.