How Reddit Crushed the Internet's Largest Protest

Dramatic Shitposter@discuss.tchncs.de to Reddit@lemmy.world – 87 points –
How Reddit Crushed the Internet's Largest Protest
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There's a lot of people in this thread that are either slightly delusional or utterly gaslighting themselves.

Reddit is not going to die over this. Reddit was always full of bots and shills astroturfing, none of that was new. And while many great contributors have left the site for good, the traffic to the site hasn't really dropped. The vast majority of (actual) Reddit users were using the main site and app, despite how terrible both are.

Sure the quality of content has objectively dropped, but do you think Reddit cares as long as traffic doesn't?

We're all here talking about Reddit and saying how shit it is now, how spez can go fuck himself, having ourselves a great little circle jerk, but Reddit gives no fucks.

It's time to get over our ex. She's moved on, she doesn't miss us and it's time we moved on too.

Fully agree.

What I'd also add is that a lot of people on here truly miss the point of why people use the likes of Twitter and Reddit over their fediverse alternatives - federation is a feature, not a selling point. Most people care about content, not about whether your instance is independent or free from corporate control.

Let Reddit do their thing, and focus on your own. If you want people to give a shit about Mastodon or Lemmy, make them better.

Exactly, content is and always will be king. For better or worse, that "highly curated" front page of Reddit will be curated to draw as many people in as possible. We don't have the luxury of algorithms or a full moderation team to weed out the spam ana the chaff, we only have ourselves. Its our Greatest superpower and we should leverage it where we can.

It reminds me of Netflix's habit of cancelling great shows and imstead making more and more trash TV because that's what is getting more views. It's what the masses who don't care that much want. Reddit, like Netflix, are chasing the broadest possible user base as possible. I used to go to Reddit for neat conversations about niche topics. Then it became an echo chamber of one liners and memes, which while fun, is antithetical to what I originally was there for.

Precisely. I've stopped being sore over corp social media, because there's no point: it's never going to change. Before I was on the fedi, I mostly lurked and consumed, but in here I feel like I'm putting down real roots and contributing to a living culture.

I don't know what the future of the internet is, but I know the bad path is further corporate capture and centralisation. If it's going to be something I want to participate in, it's going to be those parts which are decentralised.

PS this is my phone account with Sync so I can't post from this one yet.

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TBH I still use reddit sometimes. The level of debate may be trash, but it's useful for niche stuff.

Eg. still haven't found a fediverse alternative for /r/panelshows.

Lemmy's specific communities for games is also non-existant. People didn't come here, they went to Discord.

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