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The Reddit Protest Is Finally Over. Reddit Won.
(gizmodo.com)
This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.
I also found Lemmy because of Reddit's fiasco, and I think its much better. Being able to have so many instances to get stuff from and forge communities offers a lot more freedom.
+1, I wouldn’t have even considered moving off of Reddit until all the drama that had happened but once it did - and I found out about Lemmy - I’ve been happily more active on here in my communities of interest. Only reason I go back to Reddit these days is to encourage others to give Lemmy a go.
I am struggling with finding a space for the majority of my communities of interest over here. I curated such a niche homepage over my decade on Reddit that it does not compare being here. But the apps I have found that simulate my experience on my now defunct third party Reddit apps have kept me here, in the hopes that enough folks will migrate over so that communities will grow in the same way they did on Reddit.
I know Rome wasn’t built in a day, and I’m stubborn enough in my refusal to use the official Reddit app, and annoyed enough with old Reddit on mobile, that I will sit here and wait for the same experience I used to get over there.
Same here, and I also hope communities will grow as more and more people move to the Fediverse. Basically it's the niche parts of reddit that I'm missing but I've managed to stay away from it for the most part. I think we need to make sure to generate some content in the communities we are interested, being lurkers won't help Lemmy grow.
I wouldn't say Lemmy is better but it has great potential. The mobile apps aren't as good as Reddit's third party apps but that's changing. The content we are getting here isn't as good and reddit has its history of content to search through. Lemmy will have its own issues we will have to sort out but it can be done if we work together.
I think a big issue on Lemmy that I'm seeing is people making it to be Reddit-no-corporate when I believe it should be is own unique thing. Since it isn't corporate and thus no ads I think it would be hard to monetize high "karma" accounts so maybe we can get higher quality discussions. But if also seen people trying to create their echo chambers here by demanding defederation when one instance has a problem with a few trolls.
You compare Lemmy and Reddit but I see it like this : Lemmy is the code, so if you want to compare, compare say lemmy.world with Reddit, it makes more sense.
And lemmy.this and lemmy.that, that's the cool thing, everyone can have a go at making a "subreddit", with their own rules.
And I'm not holding my breath for ads, "people have to eat" etc will bring them to popular instances I guess, but then you can just migrate if you want to!
Interesting times!