this post was submitted on 22 May 2025
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Asklemmy
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Sure, but the complaints I see are never "I don't see content there that I like", it's always "its too complicated and I can't sign up/see content at all"
but if you make it to any Lemmy site, you're right there on the home feed instantly, same as reddit.
So is it really a problem of users not even making it to an instance? Are they really all getting brick-walled by join-lemmy.org, or is something else going on here?
Also, Lemmy has ways of discovering communities. Just browse the all-local or all-federated feeds and you'll see what communities are popular.
The "can't sign up" complaints might have something to do with how most instances make you answer questions like "why do you want to sign up" and "what communities will you browse" as a simple way of stopping automated sign-ups, and if they didn't put anything in the box or just said things like "IDK I'm from Reddit" they might have been rejected due to the admins thinking they're a bot or spammer or something.
Gonna throw in my personal conspiracy theory (that I don't have any evidence for): I haven't been on Reddit Alternatives since I found Lemmy, but based on what i remember, there seem to be quite a few people who have spun up their own projects and are promoting them pretty hard on that subreddit. Who's to say if one or more of them decided to buy bot comments to smear their competitors?
Yeah, that's the type of motive I was struggling to find. I could absolutely see that happening.
There is an increasing difficulty to even find out that join-lemmy.org exists.
To be fair join-lemmy.org also is a rather awful bit of user onboarding. It's very much a programmer design. Which is something all of Lemmy suffers from.
There's fine line between a good design, and over simplification. But Lemmy is pretty firmly a mile away playing in the "it works" pool.
I think a good chunk of them are just confused by going to join-lemmy and not be given a sign up in their face. Sure, we know that about 5 seconds of reading comprehension skill would get them where they want to go, but the vast majority of users don't have that. Look how many people will walk up to a cash register/till with a sign on it that says "credit card only" and then be confused that they don't take cash. Most people don't read anymore.