My preferred way to browse here is using All and blocking communities I don’t want to see. That way I get exposed to new things I wouldn’t seek out on my own (for example: British archaeology)

I accidentally blocked a community while trying to block a user and when I went to unblock it, I saw I had 1250 communities filtered. If I had to guess, 90% are either porn, sports, or anime.

What about you?

  • Mellow
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    English
    97 months ago

    I do the same thing. I use all as my home page so I can see new and interesting stuff.

    I tend to block most 'ism and 'ism-adjacent communities, Foreign language communities, political communities, NSFW/Fetish, and a few highly specific tech/app/language communities that mostly only post version updates.

    Bots. lots of bots. If your community is 90% bot posts/repost aggregation and I see 5-10 posts consecutively in ‘all’ because your bot just vomited up it’s entire load in a 120 second span then I’ll probably block it.

    • 8 Keywords (Voyager app feature)
    • 186 Users.
    • 964 Communities.
    • 38 Instances.
    • @glimseOP
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      37 months ago

      There’s way too many communities consisting solely of bots reposting from the subreddit of the same name. I do not understand why anyone would want that. There’s rarely comments

      • Ephera
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        fedilink
        37 months ago

        Leaving a comment feels weird, too. There’s not even an OP to talk to, so it’s like shouting into the void.

        In principle, I do get the need for these communities. Like, if you just want capybara pictures to show up in your feed, then you don’t need many comments on those.
        But these bots usually spit out far too many posts for my liking, so more often than not, I do block them anyways.

        • @glimseOP
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          27 months ago

          Bot-driven communities feel like ads as opposed to communities with bots that post, say, game patch notes automatically. I want there to be a reason something is posted other than to fill a void