It can go one of a few ways.

  1. Apart from the few subs that remain offline, it’ll basically be back to normal. Those that do remain offline indefinitely just get forcibly reopened or recreated by admins, especially huge subreddits like /r/videos. Smaller ones just get redicted to /r/topicnew or some other creative name.

  2. A lot of subreddits and more importantly moderators and users leave the site permanently. In order for this to happen however, there’d have to be a consensus alternative, which there isn’t ATM. Otherwise, these communities are pretty much lost forever unless the mods put a message to go to X alternative service in the “subreddit is private” banner. Tbh, I don’t think people are gonna stomach losing years of their lives in an instant so they’ll just re create subreddits unless the mods provide an alternative.

No matter what though, they’re not backing down on the effective removal of the API (still leaving the sneaky clause “you can pay us if you want but it’ll be a king’s ransom” for AI, even though they can just trawl the web manually lol). They’ll probably announce some crappy customization features to hoodwink those who don’t know what an API is and lie to them and say it’s “API v2” or whatever.

I just honestly don’t know how it’s going to shake out and I’m scared im going to lose these communities. I don’t give a single solitary fuck about Reddit the company anymore, and I never did really. I just hope all of the subreddits find a new home and don’t just shrug their shoulders and say “welp, guess that’s it guys”.

  • @CodingAndCoffee
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    1552 years ago

    Squabbles seems to have not hit user critical mass. Tildes looks like it’s doing well.

    The Lemmy + Kbin fediverse seems to be taking off like a rocket and has the best overall chance IMO of becoming the home for the best parts of Reddit’s community.

    • @[email protected]
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      712 years ago

      Squabbles

      Isn’t this developed by one person, isn’t open source and forbids NSFW in general? That is never going to go well.

      Tildes

      No mobile app and no ActivityPub so it’s a very specialised. Additionally I don’t like the UI at all and I’ve read this in multiple threads here as well.

      Lemmy + Kbin

      Both are show the same content as they are federated so it’s up to who prefers what really. I prefer Lemmy, but anything is fine.

      • @CodingAndCoffee
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        462 years ago

        re Squabbles: yes, hard agree.

        re Tildes: yes, also hard agree. The invitation-only method of growing the community also is draconian and it’s going to hit all the scaling problems a traditional site does.

        These and others are why you’re finding me with you here in the fediverse. I am with you mi beratna.

        • @[email protected]
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          442 years ago

          These and others are why you’re finding me with you here in the fediverse.

          I’ve been here for a week and it already feels like home!

          • Ataraxia
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            352 years ago

            I think people underestimate how much people are unlikely to go back to an abusive relationship when they’ve found one that isn’t. Reddit was a bad habit. I am actually going to be contributing to communities here once I figure it all out. The worst that could happen here so far is not getting any comments or votes which is fine by me. On reddit I could post a picture of my cat and someone could comment “insert random derogatory term” for no reason lol! So far so good here.

              • @samus12345
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                42 years ago

                Your mother…she’s older than you!

            • @asclepias
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              102 years ago

              It really depends on how you interacted with Reddit. A lot of my engagement was with smaller subreddits that sometimes had user bases that weren’t necessarily the most tech savvy. I’m not sure how long it took some of the older people on r/quilting to find it, but I’m sure it will take them longer to find the Lemmy version.

          • @brainschaden
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            2 years ago

            I’ve been here for a week and it already feels like home!

            Two days and same!

          • @CaptainPicard
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            72 years ago

            Yeah. It really reminds me of reddit a decade ago. I hadn’t really realized how much it’d changed before now. Reddit slowly went from a feeling of community to me just sitting isolated and scrolling numbing content. This feels so much more alive.

        • @agreyworld
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          212 years ago

          Yeah, seriously looked at Reddit alternatives when I saw a post from a big sub about going dark and how they were considering moving to tildes - but then found it was invite only. Seems silly for a million+ sub to migrate somewhere invite only

      • Bappity
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        72 years ago

        I reckon a lot of the platforms popping up with closed ecosystems will stagnate after a while. ActivityPub is brilliant and I hope more platforms adopt it!

      • @[email protected]
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        2 years ago

        and forbids NSFW in general?

        Funny enough, I’ve seen people assume Lemmy also forbids NSFW. I think they just never found lemmynsfw.com, which is basically the access point to the porniverse (you’re welcome btw if you found it here).

        There was also the thing with Beehaw banning that one other instance with Loli, which might have been seen by some who hadn’t even thought of NSFW content at all as “oh, porn not okay then”.

        • @[email protected]
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          12 years ago

          That’s not the only instance that allows nsfw even. The one I’m on seems to allow it if marked as such, though it’s not really for that in particular, and there’s a second furry instance that I’ve seen pop up recently with a pretty big user overlap with the one I joined that’s explicitly for nsfw.

    • @CodingAndCoffee
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      602 years ago

      I want to add, that my wife has been a “scab” throughout all this and has been active on reddit, trying to show me memes and such.

      The content she’s been showing me has been stale, old stuff I saw back in 2020. Same recycled jokes, same memes. Reddit is in a mode of hard cope right now and I doubt it gets better if we don’t return.

      • @NevermindNoMind
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        362 years ago

        My wife was on Reddit for about 9 years when she got hooked on TikTok about a year ago. In her words, Reddit had become boring. She still checks the local community sub, but that is about it. Just worth pointing out that Reddit is facing pressure from two ends. A lot of the more casual users, and the popular content creators, are on TikTok and other video centric platforms. Reddit can’t compete there, as much as they try. The dedicated users they did have, those interested in community and discussion, well Reddit just angered much of that group.

        Prior to the blackout, I was angry with Reddit. Since the blackout I’ve taken a step back and realized how much garbage Reddit is filled with (ads, shitposts, promoted content, etc), and how much I want to find something better. Before the blackout I was planning to quit Reddit out of anger. Now I plan to quit because, as my wife said, Reddit is boring and I’m excited to explore what comes next.

      • @macarthur_park
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        282 years ago

        I want to add, that my wife has been a “scab” throughout all this and has been active on reddit, trying to show me memes and such.

        Seems like grounds for a divorce.

        I kid of course! My girlfriend is staying off Reddit, but she’s definitely missing it and hasn’t found a good substitute for her mix of subreddits yet. It’s especially rough since twitter’s gone downhill, and that was her other main scrollable content.

        • Cat with no eyebrows
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          142 years ago

          My husband deleted his account in solidarity even though I think he doesn’t fully understand the nuances of the issue

        • Bappity
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          102 years ago

          NTA divorce immediately

      • Marxine
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        172 years ago

        On the 3rd meme recycle people wil get bored already. It probably takes less than a month to happen, as long as the “community strike” continues.

      • @Master
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        82 years ago

        For the first 12 hrs or so it was just a bunch of as reddit posts. Like 20 pages of it and a few political

    • @SeatBeeSate
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      322 years ago

      This isn’t going to be a great migration. More of a great fragmentation.

      • @[email protected]
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        262 years ago

        Which is what should happen in my opinion.

        Let small communities be small, let them govern themselves.

        • @average650
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          122 years ago

          As long as they aren’t too small. There’s a critical mass below which they’re too empty.

        • @twistedtxb
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          92 years ago

          Fragmentation / Federation is honestly the right path.

        • qprimed
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          12 years ago

          agreed. definitely looking forward to different flavours across the instances.

    • @KillaBeez
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      2 years ago

      While I’m enjoying my time here and I’m honestly shocked with the amount of engagement so far, I just don’t see the “fedaverse” ever gaining any mainstream traction. It’s unintuitive and the barrier of entry is way too high. Even googling “Lemmy” doesn’t bring up useful results.

      Something like squabbles has a better chance for mainstream appeal, but it would need a miracle as it’s only one duder

      That being said, I’ll still be here!

      • @Monkeyhog
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        382 years ago

        Honestly, the lack of mainstream appeal is part of why I like it.

        • @rolaulten
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          342 years ago

          Just remember - as content is generated SEO is naturally going to improve, which will start to bring people into kbin/lemmy via Google.

          As people spend time here marketing types will start to notice. Shortly thereafter we will see bots. To me, how we as a community handle those bots will be the real “does this experiment survive” test.

          • @teflocarbon
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            2 years ago

            Absolutely. It’s only a matter of time before someone sees the value in the information/data that is here and begin indexing the entire fediverse/site and working on SEO for it.

            There are countless examples of indexers for GitHub for example, if you do any searching for questions related to coding. Pretty much every issue and repo has been indexed.

            When reddit first popped up, posts from it came up in search results very rarely, now it’s pretty much at the top of many searches, since it’s a bastion of knowledge and community groups.

            It’s really only a matter of time if things do go well here.

          • Ataraxia
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            12 years ago

            We need google stealth mode hahah!

        • Fredselfish
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          92 years ago

          Me too. No large corporations guiding the communities and more open discussions can be had without fear of being banned.

          • Grander
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            22 years ago

            more open discussions can be had without fear of being banned.

            Not sure about that. I saw a post today about lemmy.ml’s admin, who’s also one of the main lemmy developers, banning people who said something bad about China for “orientalism”, then doubling down in it in the comments. Apparently mod logs for any instance can be accessed by any mod of any other instance. Otherwise I wouldn’t have even known. Not sure how I feel about using a service developed by someone so toxic, who’s also in charge of a big chunk of user accounts.

            • @[email protected]
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              2 years ago

              If you dont like the moderation here you can use a different instances. Thats the main reason why Lemmy has federation. And our job is to build this software, not be perfect moderators who somehow make everyone happy.

              • Grander
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                02 years ago

                And if I want to participate in a community that’s hosted on lemmy.ml I’m still under his jurisdiction. Besides, someone this banhappy being in charge of the development doesn’t fill me with much confidence. Nothing stops them from implementing some hidden change that prevents sharing something they don’t like.

      • @onepinksheep
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        302 years ago

        Even googling “Lemmy” doesn’t bring up useful results.

        It’s not helped by the fact that it has the same name as a famous musician. Googling for Lemmy just brings him up — the Fediverse doesn’t show up unless you scroll down a ways, if it even shows on the front page at all. Same with Tildes and Squabbles, both being already existing words. Branding is important for recognizability, and “Reddit” has the advantage of being a unique name.

      • Gild
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        72 years ago

        I’d rather it not have a big mainstream appeal… feels like every time I start to get into something the normies show up and start ruining it. So far I’ve been enjoying what I see here and am interested to see what happens.

      • Ataraxia
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        62 years ago

        I think that’s a good thing. I like what I’m seeing NOW as in the communities and interactions. I’m afraid to see what would happen if lemmy became a popular as reddit. But we will see and hope for the best.

      • Spaceman Spiff
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        12 years ago

        I fully agree with you that it’s unintuitive and the barrier to entry. I consider myself pretty technical, and it took hours to figure out enough about how it works, what I need to worry about, etc. And I still have major unanswered questions about how moderating works with federation.

        Contrast that to (almost) all other monolithic social media. The steps to get started are to go to their main site, click the link at the top to sign up, follow the simple prompts, then find people or communities to engage with.

  • @[email protected]
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    742 years ago

    It would not crash and burn but rather be messy and decrease in quality gradually over time. Sort of like Twitter.

    • LinkOpensChest.wav
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      572 years ago

      Digg still exists, so I have no doubt that reddit will continue to have its rotting corpse propped up and picked at, even after a lot of its biggest contributors have left the site

      • cincoswim
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        162 years ago

        Digg doesn’t even look like any sort of user-genetated content anymore. Same news layout of something like The Register or the Verge

      • @Confuzzeled
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        22 years ago

        Young paint a beautiful picture in my brain pan with your words.

  • AleGex
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    592 years ago

    I honestly hope that some kind of community remains here

    • @CodingAndCoffee
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      712 years ago

      It will. I’ve been on Reddit 16+ years and I have no itch to return or reopen the app. Meanwhile I’m getting nothing done for work because I have Mastodon, kbin, and lemmy open. The sticky/addictive power is here already.

      • @B4tid0
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        262 years ago

        Ooof yes! The “lemmy post” mantra is really sticking for me and it has being and simple to do that here , scary but like accelerating. Never dared to participate on reddit and now here is so fun to so. Only in time we will now how thing pan out but here , in lemmy, is fun. Hope to see you guys around.

        • @darius
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          32 years ago

          We are really happy that you are here and participating! Cheers, my friend!

      • @FartSmarter
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        262 years ago

        I’m an old head Reddit user like you. Are you feeling like Lemmy is feeling like the early days of Reddit. Smaller, more of a community feel?

        • @nieceandtows
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          292 years ago

          I’ve been with Reddit for 10 years, and Lemmy feels like what Reddit was around 8-7 years ago. Reddit front page posts used to be in 3-4 digit upvotes max before they changed the vote counting mechanism. Lemmy is already having 3 digit upvoted posts with hundreds of comments. My complaints of Lemmy are purely technical, and hope they get resolved before people get frustrated enough.

          • @UnspecificGravity
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            142 years ago

            I think the missing element for fed sites is creating a level of experience that works seamlessly for users that are not tech savvy at all. The really big genuine innovation that Reddit made was bridging the gap between “the internet” and “regular people”, which granted access to an enormous wealth of information that more tech focused sites aren’t ever going to be able to achieve because those totally non technical users DO have a shit ton of other knowledge and value to bring.

            • @[email protected]
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              52 years ago

              The Reddit site design was terrible when I first started there. I didn’t know there were other subreddits.

              Can you browse Lemmy without an account? The vast majority of Reddit users have no account and view the front page

              • @[email protected]
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                2 years ago

                Can you browse Lemmy without an account?

                Yeah you definitely can, I have a few other instances ‘Community’ pages bookmarked so I can go and check them out if my main instance is down. Is read-only and you can’t vote but that’s not really a big issue.

          • @FartSmarter
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            102 years ago

            I definitely agree that lemmy needs some polish. I can’t really recommend it in its current state but I’m definitely having fun here

            • @nieceandtows
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              72 years ago

              Yeah I’m definitely satisfied here, but when I tried getting people to migrate here and they responded with what bad experiences they had, I don’t even feel like trying to convince them. Not everybody wants to be patient with a beta platform, look past it’s shortcomings and work to make it better. Most people want what is already working, and I don’t blame them.

  • Perdendosi
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    522 years ago

    I’m voting for #1. Even the subs that remain offline will be replaced.

    But there’s a caveat-- I think Reddit will start to suck more quickly than it has, and, without some core mods and content providers, will become pretty much a shell of itself in a few years. Maybe it’s before it’s public; maybe it’s after.

    • @Mog_fanatic
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      232 years ago

      Yeah if the whole Netflix thing has taught us anything it’s that people don’t want to change and will put up with being treated like absolute garbage to remain in their comfortable space. Reddit will be fine. But I do hope enough people leave and stay here to start a new thriving community long term.

    • @goldenarchmage
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      2 years ago

      I think you’re wildly overestimating that timetable - over on that site I’m a member of a sub where you need intimate knowledge of the subject to moderate it effectively (and because of the nature of the subject it gets a lot of trolls to put it mildly). With no community mods that sub would become a cesspit within days, as would subs that are currently the focus of the alt-right, such as science, LGBT subs etc. It’s going to be a bin fire if the community mods leave - you’ll feel so dirty you’ll have to take a shower after every visit to your previously favourite subs…

      • @AgentGoldfish
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        202 years ago

        I was also a mod over there (recreated the same community here, but it’ll take time to fill in if it ever does). In that sub, despite well over a million subscribers, less than 200 people wrote the valuable comments. If a sizable chunk of those 200 leave, then the sub dies. And several wrote to modmail about the fact that the sub did not participate in the blackout and that they were done with the sub (and frankly, I don’t blame them, I’m also out).

        A million members doesn’t matter if the couple hundred experts pack up and leave.

        • @[email protected]OP
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          42 years ago

          Yeah this is what I keep thinking. Most people don’t contribute at all, and there’s “power submitters” who do most of the posts and top comments. With them gone, who’s actually gonna make content for people to view?

        • @berkeleyblue
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          32 years ago

          Interesting insight… Didn’t see it that way so far. Thank you!

      • @macarthur_park
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        152 years ago

        Hard agree. A few years back I was a member of a local subreddit that only had one mod. It was small enough that they were able to keep up with spam/moderating. Then one day it started getting brigaded by one of the racist subreddits. One of the many ones that had an unrepeatable name (variant on a racial slur) that’s since been banned.

        We later found out that sole mod had gone camping for a few days, so there was no one to remove all the explicit racism and ban people. They immediately cleaned up and notified admins when they got back, but I can see how quickly a community can turn awful if you don’t have dedicated mods.

    • @nieceandtows
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      102 years ago

      You’re talking as if mods are hard to find. Everybody on Reddit knows how mods powertrip, and if given an option many more will fight to fill those positions.

      • @[email protected]OP
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        52 years ago

        It will be no problem at all to find mods, what will be hard is finding good mods. You’ll have a lot of people who have 0 experience or are just genuine assholes moderating

  • @KillaBeez
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    382 years ago

    I’m honestly done with Reddit and I really hope enough people find a new home outside of it when this is all said and done. Hanging out on here has made me realize how toxic and mentally draining Reddit actually is.

    I think Reddit will continue to grow into a normie cesspool of children and mentality I’ll folks and will eventually go the way of FB and Twitter where the interesting and saine folks will dig out new communities in some other place to be determined

    • @thegameoverguy
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      172 years ago

      I couldn’t agree more with your opinion on Reddit. Over the past 10 years it has become so much more toxic and unwelcoming. It is hivemind culture and it is only going to get worse over time. The reporting on the Boston bombings should have been writing on the walls and that was a good while ago. Looking at it now, I just can’t believe how depressing it was just doom scrolling on that app daily.

    • DarkwingDuck
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      62 years ago

      I’ve been over reddit for years now… But there was no good replacement. Lemmy fills that void.

  • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆
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    322 years ago

    Why did anybody expect reddit to back down on this. Unless reddit loses a significant portion of its user base then they have no reason to care. Currently, there really isn’t any viable alternative infrastructure that could absorb millions of new users. People are going to make a fuss for a bit, but if they enjoyed using reddit before then they’ll come back to using it sooner or later.

    Frankly, I don’t know why people keep fixating on this. I’ve been using Lemmy for over three years. I use it because I enjoy the community here, and I don’t really think about what reddit is or isn’t doing.

    • Spaceman Spiff
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      12 years ago

      The blackout was to show numbers- it was not a small minority of users that cared, but rather a significant majority. Pissing off most of your users, especially your most active users, is generally a bad business move.

      The real question is what people will do on July 1. Will those same users cave and switch to the official app? Reddit is counting on most users doing that, or at least enough to make it a profitable move. I personally will not.

      I will only see Reddit when it comes up from a Google search, and will not get involved in the conversations. Some of my communities are already permanently dead, and others severely weakened. But others are fine, since most users there are already on the official app.

      As the quality drops, more people leave, and fewer people join. Reddit could cease to be a central hub and become more niche. It could also turn into a cesspool. There are some signs that neo-nazis and otherwise shitty people will take over, not unlike we are seeing with Twitter. Or it could all blow over, and this was all just a bump in the road for Reddit.

      • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆
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        02 years ago

        I guarantee you that vast majority of users will use the official app because they’re addicted to reddit. There is no readily available alternative around, and after some grumbling most people will go back to it. None of these protests really work unless there is a viable alternative available.

        Reddit could cease to be a central hub, that’s not going to happen any time in the foreseeable future. However, I still don’t see why people keep perseverating over reddit. At the end of the day why does it matter. Lemmy exists, it works fine and people who really want to break from reddit have that option now. Whether majority of people does so or not doesn’t really matter all that much to me.

  • @Doggylife
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    302 years ago

    As a few people have said already, I think it’ll slowly become more crap and alternatives will slowly bring in people who get sick of it.

    They’re hoping for IPO and once that’s done, they’ll be much less forgiving when it comes to cash grabs. I can imagine them doing things like getting rid of old.reddit, not allowing the hiding of suggested posts, ads which are very targeted and intrusive.

    I saw an article on the official Reddit Inc website talking about the use context in advertising, where advertiser’s can change their ad based on the context of the thread. It doesn’t say how they’re implementing this but I could imagine a situation where they put ads directly into threads. Either way you’ll start to see ads using wording which mimics the subreddits you’re in or the comments you write.

    I have the feeling the reddits decisions are just going to get worse as long as they can get away with it.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      132 years ago

      Yeah, honestly whether or not they back down or some solution is reached regarding the current situation, they will not stop aggressively monetizing users. A lot of veteran users will leave, some will stay or come back eventually, but I think pretty much every veteran user will be gone permanently if they get rid of old Reddit.

      • @Doggylife
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        82 years ago

        Yeah for sure. One thing I was thinking is that old.reddit and lots of the third party apps don’t include new features Reddit put out (I think the API didn’t include stuff like chat etc.) So they also could not want third party apps cause it might get in the way of people adopting new features (power users using apps that didn’t have those features).

  • @gimlithepirate
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    272 years ago

    I think the mod tools are what will blow reddit up ultimately. It’s why I’m here.

    The third party apps are a hard self own, but I don’t use reddit because of third party apps. I use third party apps because the reddit official app is… Special. If they’d forced me to sue their app I would be annoyed, but still interested in reddit.

    If you destroy the key tools that enable volunteer moderators to manage communities, the community will die. Example: two of my favorite subs were legaladvice, and bestoflegaladvice. Both required extensive moderating to function (and even then, it was prone to shit shows particularly at LA). No mod tools would make it unmoderatable… Which turns you into Voat pretty fast.

    So, I don’t think reddit dies July 1. I think reddit spends the next year turning into Twitter, and lemmy has to run as fast as it can to scale.

    Hopefully, this is my last post on lemmy talking about reddit, but I doubt I’m that lucky.

  • @[email protected]
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    272 years ago

    Personally, I will only be going back to Reddit if I need help with some specific thing and I can’t find it in Lemmy anywhere. And only for that thread.

    • @[email protected]
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      102 years ago

      I think it’s a matter of communities. People would stay on Reddit because of top communities and top quality content made on those communities. As long we have some form of aggregations of users making great content here on Lemmy as well, we’re good imho.

  • @[email protected]
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    252 years ago

    I think we’ll see a temporary “return to normalcy” after the protest finishes and most subs come back online. But come June 30 and the end of third-party apps, we’ll see a bunch of users come back to Lemmy/Kbin again.

    In a way, this seems like the best way of driving things. The protest has raised awareness and got a ton of development work going, and then there’s going to be a respite giving instances time to prepare themselves for the second surge.

  • BigUwU
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    252 years ago

    Personally, I’m happy where things are now. I came over to Lemmy because of Reddit Third Party App drama, and now I’m staying because I realized that I’m spending much less time on my phone using the less popular Lemmy.

    • @[email protected]OP
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      242 years ago

      Not gonna lie I think I’m actually spending more time on Lemmy than Reddit, participating and trying to get discussions going, making content, etc. Just to try and get it active lol

      • @planetexpress
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        62 years ago

        Totally agree. I have posted maybe once on Reddit as a 14 year user. I’m way more active here after 2 days.

    • @[email protected]
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      62 years ago

      It’s kind of nice to be scrolling through a couple pages and then “finish” all of the content in a short break or two. Much healthier way to interact on the internet, rather than an endless stream of low quality content and recurring posts.

  • @[email protected]
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    242 years ago

    A return to normality is impossible since there will be no more third party apps. It may seem like things are as they were besides that, but the progressive move by Reddit to ignore Reddit’s core value proposition (link aggregation and commenting) will continue, only to be replaced by attention towards monetisation-centric features no one asked for like NFTs & followers (which the third party apps ignored, gee I wonder why).

    Reddit has a cancer. You can either stay in denial and experience the terminal death in slow, painful motion, or you can just move on now.

    • @[email protected]
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      52 years ago

      Yeah, followers were at-least majority spam over on Reddit. I primarily did politics and gaming over there… most of the accs following me were just advertisements for OnlyFans

    • @[email protected]
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      22 years ago

      Honestly Reddit has just turned into a TikTok aggregator more than anything. It’s really all the content I ever see on there anymore (well, previously to 6/12 at least) besides the random trades-related groups I’d follow. But even those weren’t immune from posting garbage from TikTok.

  • @Kilograph
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    232 years ago

    Ends? Its already over. You, me, and many who have replied here have moved on. Reddit isn’t going anywhere but its just another site many of us will slowly see as irrelevant or uninteresting as the weeks and months tick by. For a short while in my past, DeviantArt was crazy cool. Reddit had a good run. Is Lemmy the crazy cool thing now? I dunno but I’m certainly enjoying it for the moment.

    • LetMeEatCake
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      12 years ago

      I’m looking at Reddit like Facebook now. It had its run. Many thought it would be the top social media app/site seemingly forever. It’s still around, but how many people do we know actually use it?

      I’m going to try to stay off of Reddit, but I admit there are communities there I’ll miss. Then again, it was the same when I got off Facebook. I had to build the habit of NOT using it and it’s been years now.

  • @[email protected]
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    202 years ago

    According to Reddit’s internal memo, they expect this to blow over Wednesday with most subreddits returning, and they reported no drop in revenue so far. So they’re not likely to give in yet.

    What needs to happen is that the blackout needs to continue indefinitely, and more communities need to start migrating to lemmy/kbin. If we move the content here, people will move too.

    • GreatWhiteBuffalo41
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      2 years ago

      I wish it would but we announced restricting indefinitely and we’re getting hate modmail, like a lot of it. And a shit ton of hate comments. Not a single comment yet in support.

  • @Fixtor
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    202 years ago

    We already tried to move to Voat in 2015 and it… didn’t turn out very well…

    I think if the Apollo dev actually releases an Apollo-based app for Lemmy then we might get a chance.

    • grundelgrump
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      212 years ago

      Voat was always going to be a cesspool because of the actual reason they were migrating in the first place. A bunch of hate subs got banned and the kind of people who would be upset enough to boycott that are shit heads so it was inevitable.

    • @fcuks
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      2 years ago

      I think a lot of people (myself included) were put off voat due the right wing politics and seemingly toxic nature of the site.

      With regards to Lemmy - I’m not a communist by any stretch of the imagination but I’m definitely more left leaning and liberal, and the community aspect here is decent so far.