I loved Reddit for what it is, but nothing made me back out of a post faster than seeing the top 3 parent threads as a regurgitation of the same inside jokes, pun-chains, and so on.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    512 years ago

    you have my updoot

    I jest. Ultimately without some sort of mechanic that disincentivizes noisy, low-effort joke comments there’s not going to be some sort of magical cultural shift. I’m just arriving, but from what I’m seeing Lemmy doesn’t have any sort of design that will skew comments towards actual discussion and away from jokes/noise in any meaningful way.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      272 years ago

      The way it is right now, we don’t have total “karma”, which I imagine helps to at least suppress the purely karma-farming spam. That said, there’s no real reason to think it won’t be added here eventually.

      • Sens
        link
        fedilink
        English
        172 years ago

        I hope it doesn’t, better without karma, it shouldn’t be competitive really

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          English
          6
          edit-2
          2 years ago

          Never really got the point of Karma to begin with. All it really does is measure how well you match the tone of any particular echo chamber.

          • @AnonTwo
            link
            English
            52 years ago

            If I recall, a minimum karma was used by some mod bots as a gatekeep of sorts on more official subreddits. But even then I don’t think it was more than to deter very new accounts.

            • @[email protected]
              link
              fedilink
              English
              122 years ago

              Deterring very new accounts is still a useful thing to do.

              A lot of posts on my country’s COVID sub were removed by the bot with an account too new message, and it was only set to about one week. It doesn’t really slow down new users but it cuts off a lot of spam bots.

              • @Rom
                link
                English
                2
                edit-2
                1 year ago

                deleted by creator

          • @hemko
            link
            English
            12 years ago

            deleted by creator

      • @_number8_
        link
        English
        22 years ago

        that’s really smart – but at the same time i’m horribly curious

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        22 years ago

        But you could filter out comments containing only “this” or variations with exclamations points and such

    • @GhostCowboy76
      link
      English
      102 years ago

      I am still learning Lemmy, but I agree with you from what I am seeing. There is no “karma farming” here right? So the motivation is mostly people who want to engage?

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        62 years ago

        There’s no total karma for a user yet, yes. So the perverse incentive to make number go up at all costs isn’t quite as wild as it is in Reddit.

        As I wander around Lemmy more I’m also noticing that there’s a lot of opportunity for instances to have their own subcultures, which goes against the “It doesn’t matter which Lemmy instance you use” advice I’ve seen in a couple places. It definitely seems prudent to choose an instance that has an admin team and/or a theme you like, because instance-local content is going to be the easiest to find. The instance I chose is decently small and chill, but I’ve seen some other instances with a big focus on memes. To each their own!

        • @GhostCowboy76
          link
          English
          32 years ago

          I agree with you to an extent, but I have noticed on my instance it is heavily populated with outside instances so hopefully as this grows that subculture part will not be as much of a concern and more a fun “extra bonus” if you will of your favored instance and we can still unite under our favorite “common communities."

    • Dialectic Cake
      link
      English
      22 years ago

      Agreed. I think for now it’s up to each community owner to set the expectations for their community and for the mods to enforce it. And so like Twitter…the quality of your feed will be dictated by whom you follow or in Lemmy’s case which communities you join.

    • @[email protected]OP
      link
      fedilink
      English
      22 years ago

      Yeah, I was thinking of having some sort of feature that pre-builds thread topics in a post (humor, discussion, cross-searching) where users can put there comments in depending on what it is they’re going for.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        102 years ago

        I’m also eyeballing Tildes as a Reddit alternative, and their dev has an interesting approach to increasing signal-to-noise ratio. They don’t have downvotes, but they have labels that affect how comments are sorted, with the joke and noise labels moving comments down in the sort by a pretty significant amount.

        • Sens
          link
          fedilink
          English
          6
          edit-2
          2 years ago

          Tildes developer has openly said they don’t intend for it be a replacement for reddit, and that kinda is what makes me come here instead.

          If they aren’t open to the idea, it will never happen.

          Not saying they should open the floodgates either, it’s mainly that the use cases and end goal for Tildes vs Lemmy are completely different

        • @TheTimeKnife
          link
          English
          32 years ago

          That sounds like it could work pretty well, you could even just add it on to other comment sort styles. You don’t need to necessarily remove downvotes if you really want them in specific instances.