I'm not sure if I can post here. Lemmy seems kind of complicated. For instance, I tried to post something and it said I can't because I'm on a local instance. So how do I find out what instance a community is on and how do I make it so I can post?
Then why does it say I can't post because I'm on a local instance in Lemmy.world? The instructions say it doesn't matter what server I'm on because they are all linked n
It's not that you can't post because you're a local user.
You did post there, it's just that the community mod removed it because it didn't belong in that community (their call not mine). This has nothing to do with being a local user.
It's just that lemmy.world notifies their users about removals and bans. Whereas in general, you'd need to consult the modlog to know about it.
This message is in a very confusing format, evidenced by other people in this thread misunderstanding it. It also took me a while to figure it out. I'll take a whack at rewriting it.
It is policy of lemmy.world to send a message to its users when their posts are removed from a community by a moderator of that community. This message is notifying you of such an action. The following is the reason given by the moderator of the community.
Your post in No Stupid Questions was removed for the following reason:
So everything worked as intended, the mods of that community removed your post for some reason. I can't guess without seeing the post
Some lemmy.world communities seem to be testing a moderation bot. The wording of that message is confusing, but I think they are testing the bot with their own users first.
Normally when a post is removed, users aren't notified. You were notified, and the bot is saying that you got notified because you are a local user.
I think they should change that line to something else, since it's confusing
Import your settings on the new account (settings "import settings")
However, that would not solve the issue you had. You received this message because your post had been removed, not because you were on the wrong instance.