I want to create AI communities from reddit and ask the community members to switch to lemmy.

The communites from reddit that I want to create on reddit are r/singularity, r/OpenAI, r/ChatGPT, r/Grok etc.

Which instance would be suitable for it? Is lemm.ee big enough to handle an influx of users? Or should I use lemmy.world since they’re going to be global users interested in AI?

  • my_hat_stinks
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    6 hours ago

    Why not run your own instance if you’re creating so many communities? It’ll be a lot easier to block if all the AI slop is on its own dedicated instance instead of polluting others.

    • BoJackHorseman@lemm.eeOP
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      6 hours ago

      I believe in preservation of internet data. I’m not ready to take the responsibility of maintaining a lemmy server as the server grows bigger in data with time and as more people join.

      There’s not much discussion about AI generated content in these subreddits, we discuss AI news most of the time as new AI models and tools are released almost everyday.

      • my_hat_stinks
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        3 hours ago

        I don’t see how ceding full control of your data to a third party is compatible with preservation of that data, you’re giving someone else the delete button. That’s a very odd argument.

        • BoJackHorseman@lemm.eeOP
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          3 hours ago

          Google can keep my data safe on Google drive than I can keep my hard drive safe as I’m always on the move.

          I’m pretty sure Hetzner can maintain a server uptime better than I can at home.

          Usenet backends are known to never delete their data. So if they started hosting their lemmy instances, that would be awesome.

          So I’m looking for some lemmy instance maintained by someone more responsible.