You are viewing a single comment's thread from:
RE: A Little Clarification About Community Posts, Plus Thoughts on CrossPosting and [Sorta] Evergreen Rewards
This clears up a lot of confusion I have been having.
Still swirling my head around how communities work. Many unanswered questions since they have been released. For one, how does something you post in a tribe get automatically added to a community like you mentioned?
I was thinking about building a community, but wasn't sure what happens if others want to own the same community, or if the admin goes defunct.
You can transfer ownership of your community easily enough by making someone admin, and giving them the keys. MAking a community actually makes an account with keys you have control over.
When I meant posting in tribe, I meant on www.naturalmedicine.io. It's just a bit of a code that has been added that just adds the COMMUNITY tag to it automatically, telling it to put it in that community.
If someone else wants to own same community, they can't unless you give them rights or the keys. They CAN however, call a community by the same name and poach users with a better deal. I can't stop anyone creating a natural medicine community, for example.
Thanks for the nice response.
At the moment I cannot grasp why a non-tribe owner would want to build a community.
Seems like tribes and communities (and eventually SMT's) are meant to be used together, to reward the posting of content they want to see created.
Still, I am bewildered by the distint separation caused by adding communities. With limits on how many tribe tags we can use, it seems we are now further limited by which communities can view a post. I am not sure why I would want to stop posting to my blog as my primary choice to pick up various small tribe rewards.
Perhaps commmunities exist to ensure tribe tokens are more likely to be rewarded to content mostly exclusive to the matching tribe, rather than generalized posts aimed at pilfering from as many tribes as possible. I am not sure.