On Reddit, it depends on the subreddit. Some of them I don’t care about usernames at all, but on smaller or more specialty/niche subreddits there actually can be a “community” of people who learn about each other
Something I can’t seem to figure out is what determines the @instance.whatever to appear after the username. For example, I’m on lem.ee and you are on lemmy.ml, but I see you as theksepyro, not [email protected]
Edit: WAIT I’m dumb. Is it just display name? hahah.
That’s what OP is referring to. You could make [email protected] and comment here, you’d both end up showing up as the same person on anyone using an app that doesn’t show the instance in the username.
On Reddit, it depends on the subreddit. Some of them I don’t care about usernames at all, but on smaller or more specialty/niche subreddits there actually can be a “community” of people who learn about each other
I imagine it can be similar here
Something I can’t seem to figure out is what determines the @instance.whatever to appear after the username. For example, I’m on lem.ee and you are on lemmy.ml, but I see you as theksepyro, not [email protected]
Edit: WAIT I’m dumb. Is it just display name? hahah.
That’s what OP is referring to. You could make [email protected] and comment here, you’d both end up showing up as the same person on anyone using an app that doesn’t show the instance in the username.
Fair point.