A video about the effectiveness of the Reddit protest

    •  fievel   ( @fievel@vlemmy.net ) 
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      131 year ago

      If this reddit change did not occurred, I probably never had tried Lemmy (even if I’m in OSS world for 20+ years now). First thought is that I don’t think communities going black or mods leaving reddit will do anything to reddit, it’s so big and alternative are somehow a niche for geek that they will not loose most of their user base. For mods they’ll find out some way … On the other hand, I don’t care, I’m happy here on the fediverse, I participated more discussion here in 1 month than in years on reddit. I had bad experience on my first posts on reddit (probably not interesting enough for some and then downvoted a lot), and I think that I just always thought if my post will be appreciated or not and so and finally just didn’t post. I don’t have this feeling here.

      • I haven’t gone back since the blackout, I get my content here and some other bookmarks I’d forgotten about.

        Turns out a whole bunch of us were sick of reddit anyway and were eagerly awaiting a new place to go. I’d have never heard of the Fediverse if reddit hadn’t been dicks about API pricing. I knew as soon as I came here and started exploring that this was the way to go; reddit is old news, it’s been around for 18 years, that’s forever in internet time. It’s time to move onto the next thing and the idea of hundreds (thousands!) of federated servers talking and sharing content across platforms is very exciting to me.

        • this is my experience as well

          I’ve been unhappy with the quality at reddit for years but there was no reasonable alternative that I knew about

          I had heard about Mastodon but never really researched the wider fediverse until recently

          now I will pretty much never use any corporate owned website again and will exclusively use federated software

      • I also had a terrible first experience posting on Reddit, which turned me off from activity submitting any content and only commenting rarely. I mostly lurked and voted, which I still thought of as participating in the community. But in my short time here (Kbin for me), I see the entire userbase as activity welcoming and generally nicer! Just looking at the voting scores, it seems that downvots are hardly used at all! Maybe it’s a good thing we’re separating from the common audience that was quick to turn toxic and become combative for the fun of it.

    • Path of least resistance is usually best in these cases, and frankly, it’s nicer here. I have been waiting for Lemmy to pick up after trying other fediverse applications and there is no way I am going back for any application. Now we just need YT to implode.

    •  megopie   ( @megopie@beehaw.org ) 
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      1 year ago

      NGL I’ve found the communities on here to be much more genuine. It feels like things are less manipulated, like there are less bots and less advertising companies trying to do guerrilla marketing.

      Might just be that these communities are small enough that such things are not worth the time of those who would do such things.

      At this point I think I’ll always just migrate to smaller communities as time goes on.

    • This is what made the decision for me. All the enshittification aside- in 15 years on Reddit, I did not make one lasting relationship with another human being there, even though I tried very hard at times (via everything ranging from Secret Santa to local meetup subs, to niche interest subs, and more). I have friends online that I have only known online since the 1990s, so it’s not that I’m “un-befriendable”. Reddit allows people to form mobs, not true communities, which almost always have many subsets of friends and acquaintances, rather than a bunch of strangers who actually don’t care at all if one of their members disappears.

    • It depends very much on how you use reddit. E.g. there are no mental health communities here that really helped me through difficult times. There are so many specialized communities on reddit that helped me a lot, that won’t just move over here on Lemmy. I get that if you only looked at the general feed, you don’t miss out on much on lemmy. But I never used reddit like this and now I really feel like lemmy is (still) missing the best parts of reddit :/

        •  floga   ( @floga@beehaw.org ) 
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          81 year ago

          True, but that doesn’t change the fact that if you need that kind of support right now, you’re dependent on Reddit.

          And I think it’ll take a while for Lemmy to build the size of user base that makes those kinds of specialised communities viable, unfortunately. Although I very much hope it happens.

          •  null   ( @null@slrpnk.net ) 
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            31 year ago

            Granted – I think it’s the “(still)” remark that prompted mine.

            Certainly a tough pill to swallow that to continue participating in those communities you either need to keep feeding the beast, or go wherever the majority of that community goes (which simply may not end up being Lemmy).

          • Yeah, thankfully that’s not the kind of community I’m looking for, but there are lots of smaller communities on reddit that I’m going to miss dearly. I’m hoping they’ll migrate over here

        • I was responding to “just use Lemmy, there is nothing meaningful holding you to reddit”. Sure I’m hopeful that Lemmy will grow. The comment above just annoyed me because it was suggesting that it is as easy for everyone to leave reddit. No, it’s not. But it will soon be OK, hopefully.

  • I don’t know, my brother has been a Redditor for as long as I was (15 years) and he became angry and hostile when I told him about Lemmy. We’re both in our 50s.

    He’s been using the official Reddit app for years and claims it “works perfectly for him”. He seems utterly blind to Reddit’s enshittificaton. He’s always been kind of an asshole- he behaved the same when I quit Facebook, though he eventually did the same- and he also fears new tech (he didn’t have a smartphone until 2020). I wonder if people like him- of which I’m sure there are plenty- will ever wake up.

        •  SenorBolsa   ( @SenorBolsa@beehaw.org ) 
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          1 year ago

          I actually think being older in general makes you more willing to move around on the internet, I’ve seen so many changes and joined and left so many things as they rose and fell that it’s just a fact of life that some things on the internet are very cyclical, I’m actually astonished that reddit got as far as it did while remaining relatively user friendly.

          The more sure you are of something being perpetual the more ephemeral it seems to actually be.

          • Absolutely, I already was over “sticking to a platform no matter what” when LIveJournal was bought by Russians in 2007. At one time LJ was practically my life, but I took a “scorched earth policy” with my blog there just as I did with all my Reddit content.

    •  bbtai   ( @bbtai@beehaw.org ) 
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      1 year ago

      We’ll see how it plays out. I have a feeling reddit may currently be putting in artificial upvotes and comments to save things. They’ve done it when reddit got their start, and as someone who works in tech, I know nothing’s stopping them to create a fake 10 year old account with thousands of karma and fake old replies to do some social engineering to make it appear that nothing has changed. This might work out especially for your brother who is afraid of change, or it might not.

      • I know nothing’s stopping them to create a fake 10 year old account with thousands of karma and fake old replies to do some social engineering to make it appear that nothing has changed

        No need to create them, they’ve got lots of old ‘deleted’ accounts they can resurrect for this purpose.

      • I think that’s a portion but I know a few people that just take the path of least resistance. Right now, that is absolutely not the fediverse. In a few months with all the apps already in development, it might be a better experience with better content.

      • Yeah, that’s exactly how I felt when I left Facebook, too. When my brother eventually also left it was so hard not to say “I told you so”- but I didn’t, and of course he never admitted that I was right all along. It’s good that I’ve matured enough that simply knowing it is enough.

      •  saboteur   ( @saboteur@lemmynsfw.com ) 
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        1 year ago

        Your first sentence I agree with. Your second sentence I don’t agree with. It’s still early with the reddit exodus - things have been escalating incredibly fast and most people don’t even know much about it yet, or are still processing what’s happening.

        Reddit was a big part of our lives for many people and it’s not easy to let go. I was so deeply offended by what happened that I let go quickly even though it hurt me. But people who already used the official app? For them, it’s a difficult conversation at best. But I’d say it is still early days.

      • Idk about that. Third party apps have not yet been sunsetted, so I’d imagine there are some people who are waiting until the very end to make the switch. That was my original plan for the two weeks after the blackout. Ended up jumping ship early because of how it all played out, but I’m sure there are some holdouts who plan to leave once their app dies.

  •  Shimmer   ( @Shimmer@beehaw.org ) 
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    1 year ago

    Did anyone else actually watch the video? It’s inaccurate in places and is biased towards Reddit (e.g. claims that Apollo had no backend costs). Also, it misspelled the CEO’s name as “Steve Hoffman.”

    Overall, this is the first post I’ve seen that makes me wish Beehaw had a downvote button.

    •  heftig   ( @heftig@beehaw.org ) 
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      71 year ago

      I’ve tried, but Signal is just too cumbersome to use. I sorely miss a web client and my family members sorely miss an Android tablet client. This makes it hard to recommend.

    • Yeah, Facebook just started out as a social media company. Amazon just did book deliveries. Google was just a search engine. Then kept expanding into services that people couldn’t really quit, but are privacy nightmares.

      This focus on the social media aspect of reddit has felt kind of short sided, since it’s not really considering the threat of what they could become. People think it’s just about online clubs right now, but might be wishing later more people had made an effort to quit.

    • I would have probably landed somewhere besides reddit. I considered and tried 3 different options, (Lemmy being the third) and stayed here because I was very pleased by the beehaw community. And it’s very similar to reddit, which made the transition easier.

      I’m doing my best to ditch reddit, and haven’t used it since they announced the API pricing

        •  Troy   ( @troyunrau@lemmy.ca ) 
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          51 year ago

          Yep, best thing you can do it post and comment. The 90:10 rule of lurkers to content creators likely applies. But critical mass requires the lurkers to stick around – because some percentage of them will eventually turn into content creators. When someone from Reddit checks out Lemmy for the first time, they’re going to evaluate based on volume of content and discussion. If the equivalents of their favourite subs are all ghost towns, they’ll just leave back for reddit. So the ratio needs to be higher to get the ball rolling.

          I’m taking my own advice. On Reddit, I was fairly active. 11 year account, moderated one largish sub, 17k post karma, 200k comment karma. I still moderate that sub, because the community is important. But I’ve got a stickied post pointing to the equivalent on Lemmy.

          But it’s super quiet in there, by comparison, and I cannot be the sole source of content in a community, or it just becomes me shouting down the void. This same pattern is likely repeating across the fediverse.

          But there’s hope. Yesterday, two of the communities I’ve been trying to seed got their first external posts. !geology@lemmy.ca and !spacemusic@lemmy.ca.

    • I have partially retreated back to the message boards for my niche interests, which is nice in some respects. I do find myself craving the “mindless scroll without specific topic” experience, which lemmy is providing well enough (and I assume will only improve). My desire to discontinue reddit is 40% what is being done now and 60% what I fear/strongly suspect it will become. For me that’s enough to leave. If a search engine drops me there I might read a thread from desktop, but my days of browsing it like my father did the newspaper are over.

    • Same bro (or broette). I still have my account, and I have logged in twice this month, and no times since the blackouts. I will go back occasionally, probably more when football/hockey seasons start. But what I learned in all this was there are other communities where friendlier discussion happens. Where disagreements don’t come with insults, and I can feel less like a number. I’m cool with that.

  •  Buttons   ( @Buttons@programming.dev ) 
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    1 year ago

    Telling people they need to quit Reddit is not realistic. People are more likely to respond if we give them easy and realistic advice.

    The most realistic course for most people is to join a few alternative communities that match your values. Join a Lemmy instance, join a Mastodon instance, etc.

    1. Sign up for a new community; a Lemmy instance for example.
    2. Take a few minutes to sign into the new community on all your device, you want it to be as easy as possible to start using the new community.
    3. Prefer to use the new community whenever possible. When you’re bored and going through the usual websites (you know what they are), visit the new community first, move Reddit to the bottom of the list. Avoid using Reddit, but don’t stress too much if you end up there occasionally, just give preference to everything else.

    This advice is not too intimidating, anyone can act on it, and even if only a few people act on it, it’s still effective for those few people. This plan has everything it needs to be effective and spread.

    • You’re right that telling people to quit Reddit could come off as hostile.

      Beehaw seems to be easy on sign up from my experience, so it’s here when July 1st rolls around when Reddit terminates API for third party apps. I think significant amount of users of Reddit use the app regularly, so they might leave Reddit once the app no longer works and I imagine that some of them would be unaware of the ‘old’ reddit UI so they would likely get a really negative impression of the current ‘new’ Reddit Ui that they would likely be deterred from using Reddit going forward.

      +1 on your advice!

      • I think one of the most effective is answering posts people need help on while sourcing something that a user from the fediverse contributed. It’s not aggressive. It’s not a pitch. It’s just there so people might visit it and get curious.

        Like nobody likes door to door sales people. Or cold calls. And that’s what the current approach is coming off to for people who don’t want and aren’t asking for alternatives. People who’ve felt strongly enough about leaving reddit already have. Those left don’t care.

    • If fediverse is too intimidating there is also squabbles which people there are those who made an effort to quit too. Destined for the same end as most for profit companies, but at least it’s not feeding into the current corporate juggernaut of community based companies. People do want to move and some aren’t ready for fediverse and that’s fine as long as they show flexibility to at least leave.

  • Wow. That video is terrible. At first, I thought it might be a useful perspective because it took reddit’s views into account. At the end, though, he didn’t even mention reddit’s insulting, adversarial attitude, or the fact that reddit is threatening to replace mods who continue to protest.

    I learn a lot from opposing viewpoints, but I can’t trust something that’s presented as a documentary style “deep dive” and turns out to be so biased. If someone is relying on deception and lies of omission, yet presenting themselves as neutral, I can only wonder what else they’re lying about.