I’m just another reddit refugee to be honest
The decline of reddit.
The outlook of having to use the official Reddit mobile app. No thanks. Even if the Fediverse only has a tiny fraction of the user base of Reddit, I’ll still encounter more original content in an hour on here than I’d come across during a whole day on the ad-infested active battery-drainage that is Reddit’s sorry excuse for a mobile app.
“Just in case” is a little optimistic. Come 1 July, RIP.
Reddit was my primary content aggregator. I’m from the old days, though, and they almost lost me with the redesign. With
old.reddit.comthough I could keep the experience I preferred, so I stuck around.Now that they’re pricing out third party mobile clients, though, I’m done with it. I do like that experience, though. I’ve use Diaspora for years now (after similarly jumping off the FB ship) so I when I found out there was a fediverse alternative with a similar feel I jumped at it. Doubly so when I saw that it was mostly associated with those of the leftist thought. I’m not that active on Diaspora because of all the alt- and far-right shitheels that migrated there when fucking FB got too “woke” for them. I’ve blocked more people there than I’ve followed. Lemmy’s socialist bent is refreshing, though I’d like to see more libertarian socialist (e.g. anarchist, bookchin communalist/Rojava’s democratic confederalist) discussions happening. I’m new though so maybe I just haven’t found them.
As many have said and will say, the recent Reddit changes (at least to an extent). In my case, the announcement really just accelerated my plans. I’ve been interested in the “Fediverse” for a while now, and I’ve been largely convinced it may be one solution to what I see as the malfunction of our modern internet. When I was younger, I was convinced the access to information and the ability to connect with others from across the globe would reap great rewards for all involved. In more recent years, I’ve come to wonder if social media was a mistake and whether the internet as it is will do more harm than good. But the “Fediverse” - decentralization - gives me some hope.
So, I’ve been keeping an eye on ActivityPub projects. I’ve been messing with PeerTube for a while, but not much else. I could never really get into Twitter, so I couldn’t really get into Mastodon (I tried a few times). “Reddit alternatives” were on my to-do list. I kept putting it off, but like I said, the recent announcements finally inspired me to start looking more closely. I was actually surprised to find an alternative as good as Lemmy, even if it isn’t perfect. Kind of kicking myself for failing to find the motivation sooner.
I’ve been posting on message boards forever (Game FAQ, IGN, RealGM to name a few), and reddit was my next foray. I was pretty sad to hear about the API news and I saw Lemmy mentioned in one of the threads, so I decided to join.
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same as most people reddit refuge after the 3rd party app disaster i liked mastodon though rarely use it as microblogging was never my thing so i figured id jump on here
I made my account about two years ago, same with mastodon etc., because I switched to Linux back then and was looking for more Open Source and Privacy Friendly projects. But back then Lemmy had pretty much no users, so it was so boring that I quickly was on Reddit again. Now I saw how many people started to switch to Lemmy, and I remembered that I already have an account here, sooooo yea I try to be more active here than on Reddit now again.
I came over about a year ago. Reddit has had big issues for a while, so I was lurking through alternative frontends, and when I learned a Fediverse alternative was getting pretty decent, I felt an obligation to help make it happen. I might have come from lurking on /r/piracy when they started banning piracy more actively.
Ultimately reddit is a for-profit capitalist venture. Has been from the very start, and that profit motive has directly driven it further from the userbase year after year. Advertising, badges, money-grabs, abusive staff, blocking high-quality communities, API blockages, all this was basically inevitable and it’s only going to get worse.
I am more or less active for 2 years on Lemmy. I got here because the fediverse is awesome but it lacks on content and users.
I’ve been looking for a reddit alternative for at least a year now, although I wasn’t too focused on it. I did try one (I can’t remember the name) but didn’t stick around because there was so little activity. The API change was the last straw. I actively looked for alternatives and someone recommended lemmy.
Had I known about lemmy before, I probably would have been here since last year, at least.
The same reason that I left Digg.
Pretty much this. The Reddit exodus is looking similar to the Digg exodus did, but it hasn’t fully happened yet. If Reddit’s bullshit API changes actually go through, and especially if they kill off old.reddit, I suspect we’ll see a real site-killing exodus. Reddit is incoherently stupid for doing this. They literally have a well documented example of exactly what happens when you do this hyper-capitalist shit on a userbase that doesn’t want it. That’s why Reddit exists today without much competition. Too blind to see so they’ll gladly let history repeat itself.
I came here 3 years ago when I started looking for reddit alternatives, for a while i lurked here then i eventually visisted it less and less until now
Tbh i feel a few weeks ago the site was basically dead with most posts on front page having less than 10 upvotes and low engagement on all the posts so the new people joining gave the site a revival in a way or something
Honestly, if someone could just mirror reddits content using the API key onto here, i’d have no reason to go back to reddit, the only thing I miss is keyboard shortcuts from RES
been interested in the fediverse for a while now, the decline and recent events of reddit pushed me to create a lemmy (and mastodon) account
The API changes were what pushed me over the edge. I had been sick of Reddit for years, but every other service I tried to move to was basically just getting its links and news from Reddit a few days later, so I just dealt with it so I could be informed.
I needed a critical mass of people to pick a service, and it looks like Lemmy is the place!













