Lemmy is an open-source, easily self-hostable link aggregator that you can use to share and discover interesting new ideas and discuss them with the world. It is designed to work in the Fediverse, and communicate natively with other ActivityPub services, such as Mastodon, Funkwhale and Peertube.
Lemmy aims to create a decentralized alternative to widely used proprietary services like Reddit. For a link aggregator, this means a user registered on one server can subscribe to communities on any other server, and have discussions with users registered elsewhere. The front page of popular link aggregators is where many people get their daily news, so Lemmy has the potential to help alter the social media landscape.
Link aggregators are a form of social infrastructure: communities gather around shared topics, and a single corporate platform can control ranking, moderation, reach, and account access for millions of users at once.
Lemmy distributes this power across federated instances. Communities set their own rules, voting is transparent, and users can subscribe across servers without surrendering their identity to a global surveillance graph. It offers an escape from Reddit-style monopoly, opaque ranking, and the lock-in that comes with building a community inside a proprietary silo.