Hi, I used to mod on Reddit for a while but stopped for a few years. I am hoping to find listings from communitys that need mode due to all the new traffic. I want to jump back in to support Lemmy.
A few of the communities that I created here, I probably wouldn’t want to mod long-term. They’re a piece of cake at the moment but if the fediverse were to blow up, I’d have to hand them over to someone with more time.
Join communities that interest you, maybe one day they'll need a mod. We don't need mods regulating communities that they don't care about. This only leads to power tripping authoritarians like Reddit has. Power mods are bad.
It likely depends instance to instance due to how Lemmy is federated. You may want to try browsing some small communities that you enjoy and seeing if they want an extra mod.
I imagine a lot of the time they don't feel the need to actively looking for one just yet but if the community sees a surge in people that might change in a hurry
I haven't come across a general community for it though to answer your question
One of the upsides of federated spaces was no Reddit power mods that moderate just to moderate. Maybe just create or follow communities you like and engage in then volunteer to moderate when/if they ask.
I dont feel that way, the nature of my post was to help with the new influx of users, not mod because I have nothing bettee to do but to help contribute to Lemmy.
Even with benevolent intent, you'd likely be moderating a community that you truly aren't apart of. This is ripe for members of the community to reject moderators who don't fully understand or appreciate them.
For example if you were moderating a firearms or car sub you might remove posts that you believe to encouraging illegal modifications or behavior simply out of ignorance. The community would instantly see you as some radical trying to destroy their hobby, creating discord in the community.
If you would like to help Lemmy grow continue to make posts and comments. Many communities for niche interests have only a few posts and aren't competitive with their Reddit counterpart yet. Just like Reddit the value of Lemmy isn't divined by the hosts or mods but by the users who engage with one another.