this post was submitted on 13 Mar 2026
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submitted 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago) by Beep@lemmus.org to c/technology@lemmy.world
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[โ€“] Zedstrian@sopuli.xyz 53 points 4 months ago (3 children)

When you can't trust that the votes, the comments, and the engagement you're seeing are real, you've lost the foundation a community platform is built on.

Reddit and Twitter are filled to the brim with spambots and remain successful. The lack of distinction between real and fake content serves to attract marketers and propagandists to such platforms, with most users remaining due to the network effect. With its venture capitalist funding, Digg would be just as willing to benefit from spam if it held market dominance, and thus only distributed Fediverse platforms like Lemmy or Mastodon are viable solutions.

[โ€“] micka190@lemmy.world 3 points 4 months ago

Reddit and Twitter are filled to the brim with spambots and remain successful.

Just because it's where all the users already are. You couldn't start Reddit today, it'd immediately get spammed by AI bots and no one would stick around.

Hell, Reddit's API changes had a noticeable impact on most text-only subreddits I was a part of, and then the AI content just made a lot of the remaining ones die off. No one's rushing to Lemmy to fill those niches. They're just not participating in them online, instead.

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