How many millions of users does it have? How many posts? How active are they?

  • mesamune
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    1 month ago

    …I kinda like it right now. Some communities of less than a 1000 have much more human responses. It nice. And not just from one server.

    • @[email protected]
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      141 month ago

      There are huge subreddits that are basically dead or just filled with spam. The ratio of active/passive users on Lemmy must be much much larger. A Lemmy community with 100 active members almost feels like a subreddit with 10 000 members.

      • @[email protected]
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        91 month ago

        A Lemmy community with 100 active members is more likely to be 100 active humans than a subreddit with 10,000 members is, based on the last time I went to Reddit: it was so, so clear that everything was either ChatGPT, or a repost of shit even I had already seen, or was just otherwise obviously not an authentic human sharing something interesting.

        So yeah, not entirely surprising.

        • mesamune
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          41 month ago

          It might also be that we were some of the prolific posters on reddit. I heard somewhere that the top couple percent of posters on reddit used to make a majority of the new posts. And the rest lurk

          • @[email protected]
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            41 month ago

            That’s probably true, though I’m not sure who has ever actually made a legitimate determination since you’d have to remove the non-humans from the numbers first and, well, Reddit isn’t going to tank their MAU numbers by ever releasing that kind of stat.

            It’s also not helped once you hit a certain size and the nature of scale takes over and the level of toxicity goes up: even in small groups, when a new person shows up and asks the same question for the 20th time, they start taking shit for it. If you’re in a BIG group, it turns into a giant dogpile, and people stop asking questions because who the hell likes that kind of response, so you end up with a lot of people who are subscribed to something, but none of whom actually contribute at all.

      • @[email protected]
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        11 month ago

        The density of quality users and interactions on Lemmy nowadays reminds me of Reddit’s earlier days