this post was submitted on 12 Jun 2023
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There can be multiple communities with the same name, that doesn't mean there are. Like how [email protected] and [email protected] are the same "name" but a different domain.
So say for example you and your friend start up your own Lemmy instance and decide to make your own community called "Funny" where you can post jokes, without bothering to check if there was already a more popular "Funny" in someone else's instance. There's nothing stopping you and now there will be two communities called Funny, but one would be [email protected] and yours would be [email protected]
If your "Funny" gets to be really popular too, then other people might choose to subscribe to both Funny communities, and then posts from both would be in their feed. However they are distinctly seperate and you will continue to own and run yours and lemmy.world would own theirs.
Does that make sense? I know it's a weird concept when you're used to unique names in Reddit, but it's not all that different from r/news and r/worldnews covering similar content but controlled by different people.