Lemmy vs tildes.net
When comparing Lemmy vs tildes.net, the Slant community recommends Lemmy for most people. In the question“What are the best Reddit alternatives?” Lemmy is ranked 2nd while tildes.net is ranked 4th. The most important reason people chose Lemmy is:
Anyone can self-host the software on their own server. Users can join an instance they like. You can view and comment on other servers (instances) as long as the instance you are on hasn't blocked the other instance.
Ranked in these QuestionsQuestion Ranking
Pros
Pro Federated
Anyone can self-host the software on their own server. Users can join an instance they like.
You can view and comment on other servers (instances) as long as the instance you are on hasn't blocked the other instance.
Pro Simple and fast interface
Pro Open-source
Pro Shows both number of upvotes and number of downvotes, not just total
If someone has some unpopular opinion you can still see some people upvoted it and therefore appreciated it (so you can decide to read it).
Pro Problematic instances can be blocked
If the moderation of a certain instance is not good, other instances can block it.
Pro A rich ecosystem of third party clients and software
See the awesome lemmy github repo.
Pro Can show comments that were not read
When visiting a post, it can show you comments added since the last visit, this can make it easier to read all the comments on a post you care about.
Pro Has a "Exemplary" label for labeling high quality content
You can only label one every eight hours, so it acts kind of like a "super upvote".
Pro Stern Moderation
Cyberbullies are warned and removed from the forum the moment they display patterns of harassment or vicious behavior. It's not about the topics or opinions, it's about communicating like an intelligent person rather than a troll.
Cons
Con Pro-CCP, Chinese censorship and concentration camp deniers
Con Complicated to use
Some find it quite difficult to use. As each instance is seperate, it take a lot to get used to using it.
Con Slow and unreliable
Con A community of leftist privacy and FOSS enthusiasts, run by Lemmy’s developers
Politically biased platform, that they seem to be proud of.
Con Inconsistent moderation
