I have been happily employing #lists via #QOTO's robust subscribe capabilities, and just now started to explore the conventional list features.
Basically, I leapfrogged the technology.
So now I am curious about the pro & cons of the two methods (QOTO or standard) of using lists to observe individual #fediverse account.
It seems like they are parallel/redundant in most ways with respect to me as the information consumer, but how do these two methods differ from the POV of the observed accounts and 3rd parties looking at my lists?
I really want to settle on either adding people to lists the standard way, or through subscription (current method).
#
@freemo To be a little more specific:
Do accounts know they are on your lists?
How are they different from #twitter lists?
Can lists be shared?
How is doing a #QOTO-style account #subscribe to a #list different from putting an account on a list with the show replies set to "no one".
❝How is doing a #QOTO-style account #subscribe to a #list different from putting an account on a list with the show replies set to "no one".❞
That wasn't very clear. Let me restate:
How is doing a QOTO-style subscribe of an account to a list different from putting an account on a list with the show replies set to "no one"?
Do you want to compare "subscribe and stuff posts in home" vs "subscribe and stuff posts in a list", or "subscribe and stuff posts in a list" vs something that doesn't involve subscribe?
Ah, right, I'm not sure what the basic version of this dialog does precisely. I've switched on "Open list add dialog with follow button" in settings and see a dialog (when I click a user's follow button) that IMO is much clearer (has a global follow bit, per-list subscribe bits, and per-list "put stuff here" bits that appear only if I'm following them).
@robryk @freemo
Yeah, all of that is Freemo's subcribe system, Which is separate from the native list management system.