this post was submitted on 28 Feb 2025
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There's a constant influx of new communities with softcore sexualized characters, especially anime girls, that I could do without.
I don't mind anime and manga in general, so I would rather not block the instances that specialize in it, but blocking softcore communities one by one seems be a never ending task.
I also think it may be off-putting for new members.

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[–] [email protected] 6 points 13 hours ago (3 children)

How do I discover new communities without using all?

[–] BlameThePeacock 1 points 5 hours ago

By looking at the communities listing

[–] [email protected] 0 points 5 hours ago

Do so NOT IN PUBLIC? As in... Browse all when you are in a place where it doesn't matter who can peak at your phone and just keep SFW comms on your subscriptions to browse otherwise.

Because we know most people are too lazy to properly tag them as NSFW or don't think of them as such, but at the end of the day, if you are browsing all in public or where you shouldn't, then you are the one making problems for yourself, either by random sexy content, something that could trigger a phobia or random military footage that could be too violent for someone peaking over (still their fault for being rude and peaking over).

[–] [email protected] 6 points 13 hours ago* (last edited 13 hours ago)

These guys run a bot that indexes all of the Threadiverse.

https://lemmyverse.net/communities

It's not made obvious to new users, but it's generally a considerably-better option than simply looking at anything local to your Lemmy instance (including All) if you're trying to find new stuff for a number of reasons, most-importantly the fact that your home instance will only ever see posts from a community on a remote instance if at least one other user on your home instance has subscribed to that community.

Just grab the community there (!communityname@instancename, which it will copy if you click on the community name) and search for it on your home instance. Your home instance will contact the remote instance and learn about the community if it's never heard of it before. At that point, you can subscribe to the remote community, and if you're the first user on your home instance, it will start getting posts for that community.

This is less-critical on large instances, like lemmy.world, because you've got better odds that someone else with the same home instance has subscribed to a given community, but even there, if if you use All to find new communities, there are going to be remote communities that you just won't ever see. The only way to get a complete list is to do what the lemmyverse.net guys do, to index all instances on the whole Threadiverse.

Plus, this is searchable, sortable, you get a single entry per community so you don't have to crawl through all the


potentially offensive to you


posts to find a community, you can see communities that are rarely active without waiting for someone to post, etc.