I’m a writer/animator/YouTuber/content creator.
For a little while now I’ve been consistently putting only fediverse links in the description of my videos. Every video includes my mastodon and a link to the Lemmy post in my community about the video.
So far I don’t think this has had literally any tangible effect in growing Lemmy or Mastodon (my mastodon continues to sit at 0 followers), however, I’m hoping that by continuing to include these links and simply having Lemmy be a presence that people see… That will make people more likely to sign up in the future.
My channel and my content are rather small but hopefully just existing in a space where non-fedi users hang out is enough to get people to accept the fediverse more easily.
To me, this feels like an easy way to grow the fediverse… I don’t need to explain what it is or how it works… I just provide a link and it opens how people would expect.
I’d love to hear anyone else’s thoughts on this practice or other ways that I could include the fediverse into stuff without actively scaring away people that don’t like big words.
You’re making a difference in laying down the ground work for new folks!
If you don’t mind, could you also mirror your YouTube content to some PeerTube instance?
That’s the eventual end goal but hosting video is expensive and I feel bad uploading 4k video to the platform without being able to run the instance myself.
Then don’t upload 4K videos. Lower their resolution to 1080p. Or maybe consider running an instance yourself?
People don’t read YouTube comments; they only post them.
This is in the description of the video actually.
I’ve thought about pinning the Lemmy link as the top comment but I like to highlight community members.
It seems like you didn’t read the post.
It seems they edited it after my comment because it originally said they post them as comments.
You’re right. When I wrote it I had a bit of a brain fart and your comment made me realize that so I updated the text to correct it.
I posted a comment on YouTube exactly once in my life (providing the lyrics to what the person sang), and plan to never do it again. I usually scroll through others’ while watching.
I cannot possibly be the only person who does this, especially since some peoples’ comments garner a bunch of thumbs ups and actually coherent replies in addition to the usual trash you see on YouTube (spam or totally out-of-pocket insults).
Sometimes they are funny
And they’re always angry