• @expatriado
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    1941 month ago

    2k on Lemmy? that would be like all of us 😂

    • Pistcow
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      821 month ago

      I have a 265 comment upvote. That’s like 30% of the lemmy population.

    • MentalEdge
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      1 month ago

      MAU is currently at about 45k, up from the low point of about 30k six months ago. The exodus spike subsided over a long time but now that users that didn’t stick have been shed, you can see the user base growing again, though slowly.

  • bruhduh
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    1321 month ago

    Bro casually mentioned whole lemmy population

  • atocci
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    1 month ago

    I’m honored any time a comment passes 10

    Edit: I wake up and I am honored

  • @[email protected]
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    731 month ago

    What’s nice here is that the upvote to comment ratio is pretty low compared to reddit and other platforms, meaning one upvote here means a lot more than one upvote on reddit.

    Also each post sparks cool and unique discussions so you get more out of reading and participating in the comment section.

    And that’s why I love this place

    • @[email protected]
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      151 month ago

      True. To me, Lemmy feels somewhat more like the old vBulletin forums I used to browse 15 years ago.

    • @Rolando
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      101 month ago

      Each upvote is also less likely to be a bot.

  • @[email protected]
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    281 month ago

    The highest level of achievement is missing: Getting only two downvotes on Stackoverflow

    • @[email protected]
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      31 month ago

      And the highest level of disappointment is finding a 10 year old stack overflow post that is exactly the problem you’re having, but then discover that not only does it not have an answer but you’re the one who asked it 😭

    • @[email protected]
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      31 month ago

      Has… Has that ever been accomplished??? The elders must know!

      Also not enough information to say this is an issue have you just tried checking your logs?

      • @[email protected]
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        21 month ago

        Your answer doesn’t solve the issue and is a duplicate. I’ll double downvote you right now

        😉

  • @over_clox
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    1 month ago

    You forgot ‘getting 200 upvotes on PornHub for that episode of SpongeDick RoundPants’…

    /s

  • @WillFord27
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    1 month ago

    Getting 10 million likes on YouTube is astronomically more difficult than any of the others

    Edit: For reference, the most liked YouTube video on the platform only has x5 that amount, at 53 million likes and 8.5 billion views.

    • @greencactus
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      21 month ago

      Wild. I would’ve thought it to be a MrBeast video, not a music song to be the highest upvoted one.

    • @nyctre
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      21 month ago

      Not saying getting 10 mil likes is easy, because it’s not, but that ratio of likes to views is pretty low in your example. Mr beast has 30 mil likes for a video with 150 mil views, for example. (Which, in all fairness, has a much higher ratio than average, but still)

  • @JimVanDeventer
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    131 month ago

    As if everyone on Lemmy is going to vote 200 times.

  • @Shard
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    91 month ago

    Hey I’d settle for 10 million likes on YouTube… In views alone thats worth like $100k in ad revenue. But given that likes are typically only 10% of viewership, that means a video liked by 10 million probably has 100 million views. Which is about $1 million in ad revenue for just that video, assuming a low end payout of $0.01 per view.

    • @[email protected]
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      51 month ago

      That’s not a low end payout per view. Typically it’s a fraction of a cent (USD) per view. Typically ads pay out per 1000 views, and the average of that is $0.38. To make the math easier, we’ll call it $0.50 per 1000 views, or $0.0005 per view. On top of this, YouTube takes their 45% cut, which means you’re looking at more like $0.00025 per view. Of course, that’s the average, and for a larger channel with the right audience you’re more likely to see a CPM (cost per mille, mille being 1000 in French) of a few dollars. Let’s call it $5.00, which would come to a CPM of $0.005, or roughly $0.0025 after YouTube takes their cut. That’s still $25,000 for 10 million views, which is a ton of money, but I think people have a tendency to overinflate how much money comes from Youtube ads.