New here. Migrated from Reddit. Still trying to figure out Lemmy - what’s everyone’s experiences like coming from Reddit and does Lemmy serve as a good alternative? Pros and cons/differences?

I was a fairly active member at Reddit with a good social standing, I made 1 “controversial” comment and I got perma-banned… this sucks. I mostly followed music pages like r/TheBeatles and loved to just rant about Beatles albums, Paul McCartney’s latest tour, discuss new releases from other artists and also movies/TV shows. I can’t think of any other website that offers that kind of forum-like discussion other than Lemmy?

I really did always hate that Reddit felt like a massive echo chamber. The way the system works with upvotes and downvotes, if I said anything people don’t agree with, I’d get massively downvoted. I once got temporary ban for saying I preferred Zelda Breath of the Wild over Tears of the Kingdom… it really felt like I was treading on egg shells. My perma-ban happened in a discussion within the r/EveryoneKnowsThat search for a lost wave song. Really petty.

I’ve always hoped somebody would create basically a clone of Reddit, but without the politics and without being overly-policed. Where people aren’t pushed away for respectfully voicing their opinion. Is Lemmy the answer?

  • @[email protected]
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    fedilink
    37 months ago

    I have. Many times. Look through the mod logs and you can see the leftist mods removing comment after comment. Some communities are worse than others.

    • @btaf45
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      26 months ago

      Unless it is outright hate speech comments should never be banned. Call out mods when they do this. Maybe we need a group specifically about this.

      • @[email protected]
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        fedilink
        16 months ago

        I’m very surprised there isn’t a community specifically to call out abusive mods. But then again, as I said- the mod logs speak for themselves. Look at all the “Rule 1” violations on .ml. It essentially means they can ban you for whatever vague reason they can think of.