Reddit faces content quality concerns after its Great Mod Purgemeiko60@lemmy.sdf.org to Technology@lemmy.ml – 641 points – 1 years agoarstechnica.com76Post a CommentPreviewYou are viewing a single commentView all commentsWhat the fucks a reddit?Someplace that never learned from Digg.1 more...Nobody will know in 10 yearsIf it helps give a bit of reassurance, I grew up after the Digg era, and I didn't even know it was a thing until the whole Reddit thing. Maybe in ten years time, the next generation will be the same about Reddit, or at least, one can only hope.1 more...If enough people program bots to repost to Lemmy, literally nothing. Right now, reddit's only success over Lemmy is historical conversations/recommendations/tips.2 more...
What the fucks a reddit?Someplace that never learned from Digg.1 more...Nobody will know in 10 yearsIf it helps give a bit of reassurance, I grew up after the Digg era, and I didn't even know it was a thing until the whole Reddit thing. Maybe in ten years time, the next generation will be the same about Reddit, or at least, one can only hope.1 more...If enough people program bots to repost to Lemmy, literally nothing. Right now, reddit's only success over Lemmy is historical conversations/recommendations/tips.2 more...
Nobody will know in 10 yearsIf it helps give a bit of reassurance, I grew up after the Digg era, and I didn't even know it was a thing until the whole Reddit thing. Maybe in ten years time, the next generation will be the same about Reddit, or at least, one can only hope.1 more...
If it helps give a bit of reassurance, I grew up after the Digg era, and I didn't even know it was a thing until the whole Reddit thing. Maybe in ten years time, the next generation will be the same about Reddit, or at least, one can only hope.
If enough people program bots to repost to Lemmy, literally nothing. Right now, reddit's only success over Lemmy is historical conversations/recommendations/tips.
What the fucks a reddit?
Someplace that never learned from Digg.
Nobody will know in 10 years
If it helps give a bit of reassurance, I grew up after the Digg era, and I didn't even know it was a thing until the whole Reddit thing.
Maybe in ten years time, the next generation will be the same about Reddit, or at least, one can only hope.
If enough people program bots to repost to Lemmy, literally nothing. Right now, reddit's only success over Lemmy is historical conversations/recommendations/tips.