I don’t mean to be pessimistic, bit since most subreddits are only going dark for a couple days, the site will basically be back to normal soon. I wonder how many users here are only here because of temporary outrage and not because they actually prefer Lemmy. I’m curious about people’s outlook on this situation.
I’m probably going to start using Reddit again when the blackout ends and keep using it until the end of the month, but once RIF stops working I don’t see myself going back. The way I see it, the last couple of days have been a nice stress-test period for Lemmy, but the real exodus will start in July.
Same here. It’s been good whilst it lasted. Won’t be using Reddit once Apollo stops working.
Yeah Sync for Reddit is shutting down at the end of the month, so I’ll go back and save some of my favorites and then officially get off Reddit for good come July.
I’ll still always rely on Reddit for obscure answers to questions when googling, but I plan on staying with Lemmy once Apollo is taken down. I’ve been trying it out and adjusting to it during the blackout and as long as the community stays somewhat consistent, I like it here more. Reminds me of when I first joined Reddit over a decade ago.
I usually wont quit an app over changes like this but Reddit to me is different. I like Reddit for being a place to find new communities to join and interact with what’s popular, and since the spez ama and the removal of 3rd party apps I just don’t trust it to stay that way anymore. The last thing I want to see Reddit become is another infinite scrolling content feed that an algorithm thinks you’ll like so you never want to stop scrolling. And I’m assuming since they just want to seek profit that’s what it will eventually become.
I’m sure there will be a huge downtick, but there’s also people like me who heard about Lemmy because of Reddit but this is totally something I’d support. Now that I know it’s here, I have a source for my cat videos and obscure video game recommendations, I don’t really need the activity and tumult of Reddit. I’m sure there are dozens like me. Dozens.
What community is for game recommendations?
I’ve only been here for about an hour, but I’ve found two different patientgamers instances… jury’s still out on which one I like better.
What do you follow for cat videos?
I’m still sorting that out, thus far I have just assumed that there will be cat videos. It’s basically one of the safest assumptions of the internet.
I’m not here because lemmy is better right now, but because I want to move towards open platforms and a better future. It’s an investment. Deciding to move right back to reddit 2 days after they just stabbed you in the back is shortsighted in the extreme. Reddit will not stop until it devours itself and you along with it. Disabling the API is only the latest in a long line of anti-user changes in favor of money, and you can be sure there’s more on the horizon.
I’d encourage anyone who isn’t 100% satisfied with lemmy and its user experience right now to give it some leeway, because you’re comparing the experience to reddit apps that have had years and years of polish. With a community and donations to servers and developers, we can quickly fix the most egregious papercuts. These are growing pains, and they won’t last forever.
I’m going to try my darnedest to not go back on Reddit. I’m sure I’m just a drop in the bucket for them, but it’s the principle of the thing. Same thing with Netflix and their recent household bs. Even though I got a discounted plan / free plan for fewer screens with my phone plan, I canceled because I don’t want to give them a single cent. I found myself habitually opening Reddit yesterday on my phone and then immediately closing it, so I forced myself to delete Sync :(
Still trying to get used to Lemmy but gotta rip off that Reddit band-aid and start using this more. The biggest thing I’ll miss is just how widespread Reddit was. If I had a specific question, typically Googling my question and appending “reddit” at the end would do the trick lol. Hopefully engagement here can slowly build up to that one day.
Putting ‘reddit’ in a Google search is genuinely the only way to find a good discussion on most things nowadays.
Let’s hope lemmy gets to this point in the future.
Not going back unless I’m looking for some obscure piece of knowledge. This fulfills my needs for news and conversations about niche topics. Hoping this keeps growing and new mobile apps come out to support it
I’ve been using Jerboa on Android, it works quite well! I especially appreciate the “all” feed where you can see posts from all instances.
A bit difficult to know if the app or the instance is bugging out when something goes wrong, but I’ve realized it’s mostly the instance (lemmy.ml). I assume it’s because all of us Reddit users have come over!
Same, the community here is also much nicer
Yeah, I hope enough people stay to make it somewhat active.
How many users here do you think are going to get bored and end up back on Reddit as soon as the blackout ends?
Most.
90% of the engagement I’ve seen regarding Lemmy is “Why isn’t this Reddit and work exactly the same as Reddit? When WILL it work exactly the same as Reddit?”
I’m already seeing hostility a la “Well I guess we’ll see if the devs LiStEn To ThIeR uSeRs” in regards to communities getting tied to a central authority, aka the thing this was explicitly designed to not do. I’ve been offloading my data and such to self hosted options for a few years now where I can anyway, so I’m down to stay, but I DO look forward to the end of the protest and the Reddit stans going home like nothing happened like they were always going to. > How many users here do you think are going to get bored and end up back on Reddit as soon as the blackout ends?
I like to think that Lemmy is transitioning from early adopters to First Followers (to take from this Ted talk
If only 10% of new users stay, they start to build out new servers and communities. As Reddit continues to degrade, some (maybe even most) of those 90% will start to trickle back, creating lasting growth and widespread adoption (vs the casual tourism).
Just before all this blackout stuff started lining up I got a week ban for abusing reports on a report they agreed with and actioned. I’ve been pretty over Reddit anyway so here we are lets goooooo lol
No idea - but I actually think the Fediverse concept maps to Reddit way better than it has other social networks so I could see some iteration of this really catching on over time.
For something like Twitter, the whole value proposition is “one big universal conversation” and the federated stuff gets in the way of that a little bit, but Reddit has always been a federation of communities (who occasionally fight, join together, cross post, etc) - that maps really well to this stuff.
No RiF, no old.reddit, no coming back.
I already know RIF is gone. I’m operating on the assumption that old.reddit will be gone soon.
Even with old.reddit, you still get karma bots and rampant native advertising and corporate bullshittery that I won’t miss.
I’m ready to cast off reddit and forge ahead to the next platform, even if I know the journey will be a bit rocky at first.
Wow I didn’t know they were canning old.reddit.
They aren’t - yet. But it’s only a matter of time.
They are not canning old.reddit
Yet
I don’t think they’ve said they will, it’s just a popular theory.
I’m staying here, the community is way better. I’ll use both but only post and comment on Lemmy
deleted by creator
The users will go where the content is.
If reddit has 90% of the content it will get 90% of the users. If it has 90% of the users they will generate the content.
It’s a chicken and the egg problem that will only changes when someone drops the egg.
Well reddit is currently dropping the egg…
We need to educate users and Reddit people to really understand how Lemmy works, and why it’s good. People keep giving the email analogy but that may not be enough. I still see a lot of users asking if they need to have an account on every Lemmy instance. We need to explain simply that :
- You can sub a community that is not local ;
- There can be two community that are called the same but on different instance (ie: [email protected] and [email protected]) ;
- Same is for your username. We should also give tips on how to find an instance that is relevant for you and how to find communities.
I feel like that last sentence is the most important for me. I was a Reddit /r/all lurker. I just kind of wanted something to look at, latest news, etc. It’d be nice if I could just sign up under an instance which is focused on providing that basic content. Trying to find communities and subscribe to them is a little cumbersome.
Also, though, I’m concerned about scalability. If every Lemmy user wants to subscribe to something like “latest news”, aren’t they all going to want to sub to the same community on the same instance? Isn’t that instance going to become prohibitively expensive to run?
I was a Reddit /r/all lurker. I just kind of wanted something to look at, latest news, etc. It’d be nice if I could just sign up under an instance which is focused on providing that basic content. Trying to find communities and subscribe to them is a little cumbersome.
I haven’t really been looking at it to see how well it’s working, but this page was built to mimic
r/all
. It aggregates from these communities as described here.
To be honest I came here because of the blackout. I intend to stay. I have already been more active here than in years lurking on Reddit!
The amount of new content I’m seeing every day should prevent some of that.
I’m seriously shocked at how much Lemmy has blown up over the past couple days.
It would really help the adoption of Lemmy if we get a ‘multisub’-idea, that Reddit uses, where a user could bind multiple instances’ communities together, and make it appear as one community.
(So I can bind all similar instances into one).
Regardless, I won’t be going back to Reddit. If I stick around Lemmy, that’s kind of up to how I enjoy this platform & usability, but I can be quite stubborn with my ‘morals’. Once a platform is done for me, it is done lmao.
Isn’t what you’re talking about just subscribing to the different instances communities?
I’m not a lemmy pro, but I think subscribing to multiple communities only works if that’s all you ever subscribe to. If I decide I want to look at all the posts of /r/tech+technology+techsupport on reddit I can do that by writing the URL in that fashion. If I want a focused view of specific lemmy communities at one time I don’t know if that’s possible yet?