• diamat
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    9610 months ago

    Not a single mention of lemmy or kbin or any other alternative for that matter. While Reddit might not have lost a lot of traffic, Lemmy has seen incredible growth during all of this. I can still remember how empty this place was before Reddit went through with the api changes. Just thinking about how many great mobile apps we have now makes me really confident in Lemmy’s future.

    • @[email protected]
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      4010 months ago

      There used to be no viable alternative to Reddit. Now there is. That seems like quite an impact to me.

    • @HipHoboHarold
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      2510 months ago

      I honestly question if it even still has the same amount of traffic. Like it was no secret that site had bots. It’s been a thing for awhile. But it’s only gotten worse. I get on once in awhile for one particular niche sub. But I had to stop browsing the rest.

      For awhile, subs about pop culture and celebrities started getting to /all, but it’s posts like “What’s you favorite sitcom moment?!” AITA became even more popular, but the stories feel even more fake and formulaic. Before there were times when the top comments were bots commenting on the repost bots post. Now it’s not uncommon for people to point it out. The repost bot posts, the other bot steals the top comments and post those.

      It’s also become even more right wing in a lot of places. So depending on your political leanings, that can be a turn off for some.

      Either way, the site really has gone downhill.

      • Stern
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        910 months ago

        I honestly question if it even still has the same amount of traffic.

        They used to have traffic stats for each subreddit. Now they don’t. Could be cost saving by dumping a feature that didn’t see massive use, or maybe theres some facts they don’t want getting out…

    • Bipta
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      1710 months ago

      They might not have lost traffic but they sure lost quality. Discussions are 20% dumber and more aggravating now.

      • @[email protected]
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        110 months ago

        The quality of posts was already pretty poor before the ‘protest’. Now it’s just reposted garbage, unless it’s a very niche subreddit.

    • @BonesOfTheMoonOP
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      1510 months ago

      I didn’t know the fediverse existed and now I’m in several places in it. The Catodon.social is the most excellent microblogging design ever. It’s great here.

      • Rentlar
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        610 months ago

        I knew about Friendica, Mastodon since a couple years ago but Twitter/Facebook style posting wasn’t for me. I found Lemmy maybe 3 months earlier than the main push in June and that really was what I was looking for.

        • @BonesOfTheMoonOP
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          310 months ago

          catodon you can do long form posts on despite being a Twitter clone and the design is awesome. I’m not much on microblogging either but this is really cool looking.

          • @[email protected]
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            210 months ago

            Do you know how Catodon compares with Mastodon? I tried looking it up and information on it is scarce and vague.

            • @BonesOfTheMoonOP
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              310 months ago

              it literally just launched last week is why. The UI is SO much nicer than Mastodon and you can read all of Mastodon from it so it’s really nice!

    • HobbitFoot
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      1110 months ago

      Lemmy would only get mentioned if it was a serious competitor to Reddit, which it isn’t.

      A lot would need to change for that to happen.

      • @TrickDacy
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        410 months ago

        I don’t want it to compete with reddit, but why is that the only reason it could be mentioned? Seems arbitrary

        • HobbitFoot
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          510 months ago

          The article is about Reddit. Why else would the article mention Lemmy?

          • @TrickDacy
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            10 months ago

            Because it’s a related, relevant thing…

            • HobbitFoot
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              210 months ago

              Related, yes. Relevant, I don’t think so.

              Tech reporters aren’t going to list every competing product or service, only the big ones. Lemmy may have grown a lot, but it is nowhere near the size that Reddit was 10 years ago.

    • haui
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      310 months ago

      Honest question: Would we gain anything by bot placing questions into discussions with certain topics in it? Like foreign governments astroturf for their interests, we could instead ask questions under specific comments:

      „The mods are gonna delete this.“ sick of getting your stuff deleted? Have you tried lemmy?

      „Imagine shilling for corpos“ have you tried leaving corpo land? Have you tried lemmy?

      Etc

      • Rhynoplaz
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        10 months ago

        Honestly, posting anti-Reddit stuff on Reddit, and even reposting articles about the impressive, yet ineffective stuff we did last summer, just feels like fishing for approval from strangers.

        It’s like breaking up with your ex and talking about them constantly for the next 6 months. You don’t need to show off your new girlfriend to them. You don’t need your friends to tell you how great it is that you broke up. Just move on.

        • haui
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          310 months ago

          I agree on the girlfriend part although most people on the web only have theoretical knowledge of that.

          But posting influencial content is just a tool. Its morally ambiguous which makes me wary of it but the question is if we are willing to take measures to help people get out of there.

          Its a philosophical as well as sociological question imo.

  • @[email protected]
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    10 months ago

    The “protest” was a fucking joke. Mods folded like a fucking wet paper towel. Reddit didn’t change at all. Lemmy got marginally more popular. This article is useless.

    • XYZinferno
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      710 months ago

      Lemmy got more than just “marginally” popular. It saw the biggest boom within its entire lifetime and became a viable alternative for anyone seekong an alternative to Reddit. We both still use it.

      The article proves that enough noise was made to catch the attention of the biggest news publications, which remember the protest to this day. In other words, people still remember what Reddit did.

      As far as online protests go, that was more successful than any other coordinated online protest in recent memory. Gotta start somewhere.

      • @[email protected]
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        10 months ago

        Fair enough. I think both can be true. Lemmy got a pick me up AND the Reddit protest was a fucking joke in the sense that:

        1. It was only planned to last like a week

        2. Like 99% of mods folded like a wet paper towel at the first threat from Reddit

        3. Many subs took polls on wherher to re open and the fucking plebs of Reddit overwhelmingly said to re open

        4. Just talk to people who aren’t in our little Lemmy corner. Most people still use Reddit and act like nothing changed.

        Reddit wasn’t really harmed. Most people don’t care. Lemmy got more popular but active users have already leveled off and even declined. Still a boost to Lemmy at the end of the day. But overall this whole protest was a fucking meme.

  • @jqubed
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    610 months ago

    I’ve only just joined Lemmy but have barely been on Reddit since the blackouts. I used to be a daily user and now only go on maybe once a month or so, basically when a search result leads me to Reddit as a possible answer. It’s a little disappointing that the traffic hasn’t significantly changed; I figured the only way they would really take notice would be if there was a noticeable drop in traffic, affecting ad revenue and I’d have to do my part.

    • @BonesOfTheMoonOP
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      210 months ago

      I haven’t been on Reddit since save for a couple of unavoidable search results as well, but people on Lemmy say the quality of posts and comments has gone down significantly. I’m glad to be done.

  • @[email protected]
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    210 months ago

    Pretty sure like 99% of Lemmy’s post Reddit protest “growth” is from the piracy community migrating over.