• db0
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    1572 months ago

    The growth in 2025 has been staggering, ngl. And this is the kind of thing which converts from a trickle to a tsunami very quickly. It never happens with one shock. But a consistent amount of enshittification shocks. Reddit’s desperate struggle for profitability practically ensures those will keep happening, so this is all inevitable at this point. The only thing that is uncertain is whether digg can recapture the fleeing masses who are not cognizant of the dangers of corporate vc-backed enshittification yet, like bluesky did to Twitter.

    • DeeDan06
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      312 months ago

      Yeah. Reddit is currently enshitifying in overdrive. They used to just do dumb features nobody wants, but now they are actively harming the base. The entire Luigi over-moderation this is just bad, and it feels like they want the formerly leftist site to go full maga now. and even if I do have to use it, the website often tends to not function properly these days, with the site constantly reloading, or voting functions to be broken. This is the year of lemmy.

      • @El_Scapacabra@lemm.ee
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        202 months ago

        I figured the planned paywalling of content was going to be the last straw for me, but then they gave me a fucking warning for upvoting. I made a Lemmy account the same day. Fuck them.

        The paywall shit is still planned for this year afaik so be prepared to see more of Reddit heading this way.

  • Sjmarf
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    1122 months ago

    Worth noting is that what counts as an “active user” has changed between now and then. During the Reddit API exodus, an “active user” was a user who had posted or commented in the past month. Now, it includes users who have voted. If the 54k MAU record was set using the first algorithm, it is likely that the MAU using the new algorithm (which includes voting) would have been much higher.

      • @chiliedogg@lemmy.world
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        132 months ago

        I think this is an artifact of what’s oddly the biggest weakness of the fediverse: decentralization.

        When I used reddit back pre-api stuff, my front page was 100% niche subs I’d subscribed to, but those niches have trouble le growing here because there’s so many instances.

        I was super active in the scuba subreddit. Here on Lemmy, there’s several scuba groups that tried to form, but none of them stuck because they were all on different instances instead of one central location where everyone could work together to make the community.

        As a result, most of us haven’t been filtering out 99% of Lemmy because the 1% where we’d be active doesn’t exist. It’s like joining reddit and having your frontpage be /r/all. It’s a shitty experience that g9ves a lot of weight to political posts.

          • @chiliedogg@lemmy.world
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            12 months ago

            No, but there’s fragmentation of communities. Instead of one central place for the community to form, you have to look at dozens of locations, where there may be a sub, but it may have 1 post in the last 4 months.

        • Tuukka R
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          42 months ago

          It doesn’t matter almost at all which instance a community is on. People could just unite the different scuba groups into one. Basically any they see fit. I’m not sure the decentralization really causes this effect. Or does it make it too difficult to find communities? I’ve been plenty able to find communities from various instances, at least.

          • @chiliedogg@lemmy.world
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            22 months ago

            If people have to follow breadcrumbs to find which of the dozen groups is active, if any, very few people are going to join.

            On reddit, if you wanted to find a sub for airbrushing, you would type in /r/airbrush. That was it.

            On Lemmy, there’s no central location for communities, but even worse is that most of the big instances WILL have a community with that name - it’ll just be a dead community that someone started but never took off, so there’s a bunch of false leads.

            • Tuukka R
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              12 months ago

              You aren’t wrong with that :)

              The problem exists, although its scale isn’t as big as it first seems. On Lemmy you can write “Airbrush” and join the biggest of the communities. It’s quite visible that this is what is happening in several communities. One starts growing and then that’s what people choose to join, etc.

      • @subarctictundra@lemmy.world
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        52 months ago

        Yeah, I feel like people on here have a bad habit of relating even completely unrelated posts back to US politics. But if you keep reading the news then your brain tends to do that.

    • @DopaDodge@lemmy.world
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      272 months ago

      Help retain users by discussing more than just politics

      One of the things I feel like Lemmy is still missing or is under developed is the niche hobbyist and tech help communities. I’m referring to places users can go to ask questions and start to build up a knowledge base of sorts that people will find and reference. Kind of like how if you want to actually find useful information for something, you used to add “Reddit” to every search to get meaningful results. Hopefully, that can become Lemmy. Assuming of course search engines even index Lemmy well enough

      One way to start could be just having people post small tutorials or solutions for popular problems or topics in respective communities. I know the internet has changed a lot but “back in the old days” that was a great way to get engagement going at least on tech forums.

      • @jsomae@lemmy.ml
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        52 months ago

        search engines hardly index lemmy unfortunately. Probably due to having too much repeated content on different URLs.

        • @DopaDodge@lemmy.world
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          52 months ago

          Probably due to having too much repeated content on different URLs.

          It seems like its gotten better in the last 2 years as I can at least get lemmy results now, and popular instances show up more but yea, still not great.

        • @DopaDodge@lemmy.world
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          32 months ago

          Well not really, as I’m talking about any type of self-help content not just computers/tech. Any helpful content that people would be able to find vs just all news, politics and memes

  • @Flummoxx@lemm.ee
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    612 months ago

    I’ll just say, the more I hang around Lemmy, the more I enjoy the genuine conversations. It feels like less snark, less joke replies, and just a generally more community-type feeling. Reminds me of when I first tried Reddit after leaving Digg way back when.

    Hopefully, us exiles can leave the Reddit back at Reddit.

    • @Lexxly@lemmy.ca
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      272 months ago

      I find a bunch of snark here, but it absolutely feels more genuine. With reddit it felt like half the comments I saw were from bots. More than half, maybe.

    • @Lucky13@lemmy.world
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      52 months ago

      I like a lot of things here better than Reddit. For one thing, I don’t see the stupid buzzwords like literally or cringe in 98% of all posts. There’s no hivemind here…yet. And hopefully there won’t be.

      Also not the same 5 memes repeated for 15 years.

  • Sunshine (she/her)OP
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    2 months ago

    It’s so nice to see the servers are not crashing anymore this time around like how Lemmy.world did for me a few times back when I first joined in 2023 and I remember when the only app that was available on ios was just Wefwef before Memmy and Mlem came out of testflight. Today the apps are much more developed as we now have: 6 ios apps, 10 android apps, advanced search, moderator tools, user tags, in-app video playback, baby account indicator, advanced markdown editors, crossposting, watch support, expanded customizations, content filters, fediseer integration, side by side posts, alternate sources menu, song service integration, direct messages in app, gallery view, local sub count on communities, troll buster, user theme directory, open web post in app, gestures, media bias check, alt check and personal contribution stats.

    • qaz
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      2 months ago

      Yes I remember the lemmy.world servers being DDOS’ed every couple of days and having to switch between 3 clients and the webinterface because all of the apps were missing some features. The alternative frontends like photon and tesseract have really improved and imo should be the new defaults.

  • @ColeSloth@discuss.tchncs.de
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    412 months ago

    To anyone new wondering about phone apps for Lemmy, I use “Thunder” and it works great.

    Also, feel free to say Luigi without getting banned.

  • @imetators@lemm.ee
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    362 months ago

    Lemmy is more polished and populated now than before. Hope influx stays and we got all the real people from reddit and bots stay there.

    • @Otiz@sopuli.xyz
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      2 months ago

      Downloading an app instead of using the web gui helped me a lot, almost gave up on Lemmy couple days ago. But some of these apps are so well made. Really shows commitment

  • @notanapple@lemm.ee
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    342 months ago

    The MAU of lemmy.world is ~18,600 which is a bit greater than the combined MAU of the next 7 instances (a big help here is lemm.ee which has ~7000 MAU). This is a really healthy spread of users and it means we don’t lose lemmy if the biggest instance goes down.

    Compare that to Mastodon, where mastodon.social has more MAU (~372,000) than the combined MAU of the next 30 instances at least (I gave up counting). Thats not healthy for the ecosystem. Though tbf the total MAU of mastodon is ~899,000 so without mastodon.social they will still have ~527,000 but it will be very spread out.

    • db0
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      232 months ago

      I don’t think it’s healthy enough but certainly better than the mastodon ecosystem

  • @F_OFF_Reddit@lemmy.world
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    292 months ago

    Yeah in a few days I’m going to delete my Reddit account, liking this place so far, you get news and genuine discussion.

    • @faberyayo@lemm.ee
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      82 months ago

      Absolutely. Feels like it’s 2005 again, and you discover all kind of new places on the internet.

      • socialjusticewizard
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        52 months ago

        Eh. to some degree, enshittification is going to happen as more people come in, because more people = more shitty people. If we want to have the good niche communities that are IMO the only excellent thing about reddit, we’ll have to put up with the fact that that also means a bunch of annoying people use the service.

        At least Lemmy has far, far better tools for dealing with them.

  • @60d@lemmy.ca
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    252 months ago

    There are dozens of us.

    I am one of the proud new users, and this is great to see!