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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 14th, 2023

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  • I hate this notion that a platform isn’t successful unless it has a billion users. As long as there’s a critical mass of people, it’s fine. One thing I’ve realised browsing lemmy for the past week is just how much of my Reddit experience was defined by the same handful of Twitter screenshots and rehosted tiktoks being reposted over and over again like every week.

    I agree, I just don’t think lemmy is at critical mass yet.

    Maybe it’s just me, but it feels like most of the discussion is still centered around how bad reddit has become. Only after reddit stops living rent free inside people’s heads, will lemmy be able to develop its own culture, IMO.





  • I tried sorting by “New”, and while that does show me new content, it won’t show my new content that the community thinks it’s good (that’s the whole point about having a voting system).

    I’ve changed from the default (i.e. “Active”) into “Hot”, but the frontpage is still very stale.

    One reddit feature I do miss is the ability to automatically hide posts that you already upvoted or downvoted. That would keep my frontpage relatively fresh.


  • Doubt it, it’s expensive to host and creators won’t have ways to ways to monetize it as easily as YouTube.

    Also, I wouldn’t really call the Twitter and Reddit cases “exodus”. As much as I would like to see the fediverse succeed, the number of users on mastodon and Lemmy are just a blip on the radar.

    I still see the same links on my Lemmy frontage days after they have been submitted, it’s far less active than Reddit.




  • I agree it needs to be more intuitive, however, I would argue that Linux is far more intuitive than it used to be. Still, people didn’t switch.

    Another driving force is that people don’t like change, and people use whatever others use. TikTok bought another company just to get their userbase, it’s that important.

    The fediverse is fighting an uphill battle. You’d have to provide a platform that is far more intuitive and engaging than the competition, while relying on volunteer labour.


  • To be fair, there was a viable and easy to use alternative (Reddit). And the community was largely tech savvy.

    Today there are more computer users, so the average tech literacy is higher, but the tech literacy of the average computer user is lower. People want slick, easy to use, centralised solutions.

    I’m not too concerned about this thought. I think realistically the fediverse could achieve a critical mass to keep it going, but won’t be too large that it becomes just a bunch of noise (like Reddit).