It’s no secret that Lemmy is shaping up to be a viable alternative to Reddit. The issue it faces however is that it’s still relatively niche and not many people know about it. I propose that we change this. By contacting the mods of large subreddits and asking them to make and promote relevant Lemmy communities we could substantially increase the amount of people who discover the fediverse. What’s more, I don’t think this is would be a hard sell considering many mods are already pissed off with Reddit due to their API changes. I believe that this is the time to act, so this is a call to arms, to help grow the fediverse into the future of social media!

221 points

Have a look at this post, we had a similar discussion there: https://lemmy.world/post/3074361

Long story short, the platform still needs a bit of work before being able to really move communities. Some examples exist (lemdro.id, piracy, startrek) but those are tech savvy audiences, there would be a lot more friction with more generalist communities

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102 points

I fully agree with you. And I want to emphasize that the main issue is that if you start advertising Lemmy like OP suggest before it’s “fully ready” to give the best experience to this people, they will decide now that lemmy is not for them and after that it’s very difficult to make they try again and change their mind.

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44 points

Exactly the mistake threads just made, trying to capitalize on twitter’s rate limiting fiasco. The “general public” is extremely fickle, and Reddit will give us more opportunities.

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9 points

I don’t know, I feel like the issue (at least part of it) with Threads wasn’t that it needed more time in the oven, but that it was birthed pre-shitified. Remember the steps: good to the users, then good to the advertisers, then good to themselves. Threads basically tried to skip step 1. It felt every bit as manipulative as the Facebook feed, because it effectively was.

It didn’t come through feeling like a breath of fresh air from Twitter in any way except (to your point) the lack of rate limiting. But even without that, the mindset and motivation behind Threads makes it dead on arrival. It has nothing to offer except being “not Twitter”, and the cold, corporate hand is very evident. Turning off the rate limiting, Twitter got those users back.

The lesson there is you have to have something the entrenched platform doesn’t if you want to keep the users. Lemmy is already ahead in that department simply by having 3rd party apps.

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22 points

Server issues and quits need to be addressed, and mobile apps Ned to be polished. If the UX isn’t at least on par with Reddit, then it will only hurt to advertise now to the general public.

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15 points

One thing that annoys me coming from Reddit is, that there isn’t just one group of each theme. You have for example gaming groups on several instances and you can either chose to subscribe to a number of those or chose the one you like.

But in the end, one will be the go-to group, and wouldn’t that centralize the most popular groups?

(Honest question, I’m new to Lemmy and the thoughts behind it)

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30 points

instances are like countries with their own constitution (rules) and police (mods). This means that two communities in different instances may seem the same, but they are not, because they have to follow the rules and culture of their instance.

Just like a Technology club in Japan will not be the same as the Technology club in the US because they will be culturally different. I think it will take some time for the Fediverse to think this way.

For me, this is better. Instead of having one giant technology community where your comments and posts are drowned out, we can have different technology communities with their own culture and norms, just like we visit different countries. Your comment and posts will be not drowned out.

It is a different paradigm to the centralised one of Reddit.

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25 points

Yep, if you’re not from the US, instances are vastly superior.

Imagine all the times people from around the world asked for plumbing help on Reddit and got hit with “that ain’t up to code, buddy, get to ass down to Howm Deeepo” 😂

Americans do tend to assume the internet revolves around them, as they’re a bit insular and don’t see that it really, really, really doesn’t

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9 points

I predict it will be the mobile apps that get us over that hump

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8 points

Definitely. Sync and Boost will bring the largest users influx

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8 points

45k users in a week with sync.

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2 points

Infinity too.

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2 points

Which is unfortunate imo. More mobile users means less effort and lower quality content

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9 points

Mirror for that lemmy.world post since they’re currently down…

https://programming.dev/post/1625433

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5 points

The fact that large instances hit more downtime than something like reddit will always be a detriment.

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20 points

lemmy.world really needs to close signups and the creation of new communities, until they can improve their uptime

or they should at least be removed from https://join-lemmy.org/instances maybe it could track the uptime and use that to build the list?

but Reddit actually does go down pretty often too

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1 point

Thanks!

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8 points

I do agree, however I would argue that an increased user base would help accelerate progress on improving lemmy

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9 points

To be honest, people who are tech savvy and bug tolerant enough to be on Lemmy are probably already here. There were quite a few discussions about it (and still now on Reddit)

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6 points

Yeah, people say we should use small instances to keep things spread out but two of the ones I tried have major posting issues that stop comments working, We really need to stress test and big squish before we really push it to everyone, some of the issues I’ve seen have been fixed and on general it’s very stable so I don’t think it’s got far to go

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3 points

Which were those, out of curiosity?

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1 point

Discuss.online and slrpnk both good communities but issues with syncing

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4 points

It also needs about 1000% less hostility when it comes to anything beyond superficial discussion. Basically every news thread just gets brigaded by idiots trolling with pictures of pig shit. I get it, internet is not serious business, but in terms of actual discourse at the moment, this place is worse than Facebook.

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15 points

Wow, my experience is very opposite this. It sounds like you’re describing reddit to me honestly. I’ve seen way less hostility here compared with Reddit

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4 points
*

It depends on what content you consume I guess. On Reddit, news subs generally enforce decorum pretty strongly which really eliminates outright trolling. On lemmy there is the opposite of this in many places - lemmygrad and hexbear openly state that it is their goal to shit up threads to deny “shit libs” a platform, and the mods on several major instances seem to openly allow it.

So if you never consume that kind of content on either platform, you’d never notice the relative toxicity of lemmy.

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1 point

I don’t see that either. People have disagreed with me politely and intelligently here which is just good conversation.

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5 points

Yeah, I’ve run into this here. I posted a question to one of the posts asking why it was such a big deal, and all the sudden I’m a corporate defender. I don’t think this is a reddit, lemmy, or anything issue, it’s just internet and echo chambers. If you don’t reply with a “OMG YES SO TRUE OMG” then you are a dissident.

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-2 points

Come visit !worldnews@sh.itjust.works if you want quality discussion!

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124 points

How about we just forget about trying to beat anyone and just get on to using the platform.

Reddit won’t die anytime soon.

Lemmy won’t become popular anytime soon.

It took Reddit years before it became a major platform known by millions. It will take Lemmy years to gain notoriety among millions. Give it time, enjoy what it so now because in a year, two years or three or four years from now, we’ll all be wishing for the good old days when Lemmy just started and we were able to enjoy the simple system it is now.

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24 points
*

Reddit really did benefit from the fall of Digg though - this was about just shy of 20 years ago? Digg was where Reddit is now, thoroughly upsetting its user base with wholesale changes to the content of the site that nobody liked, and Reddit capitalized on that, and stole Digg’s thunder.

I think Lemmy can potentially do the same. For a second, it looked like Squabbles/Squabblr was going to be the winner, but the last I checked, they imploded after some controversy.

(I came here from Reddit, incidentally - the user interface is very intuitive.)

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4 points

Yeah lemmy can do the same, but begging redditors to switch won’t help anything. I was part of the digg migration, nobody on reddit ever posted on digg to go switch. I just searched for something else, and reddit was there. I certainly didn’t spend a second thinking about digg afterwards, and i wont think about reddit either.

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3 points

Doesn’t seem like most Reddit users care. There is still way more activity on Reddit then here, and that probably isn’t changing anytime soon. And right now Reddit still has better content since it seems mostly Lemmy is just posts about Reddit.

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1 point

Look at the comments per day of any major subs such as

https://subredditstats.com/r/AskReddit

The 3rd party apps shutdown made a huge impact on the number of comments. Activity is still there, but much less

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2 points

Agreed, lots of naysayers here for some reason

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4 points
*

I know right? People think that Lemmy will grow “naturally”, but Lemmy is not a plant, there is nothing natural about this process. If people want it to grow, actions must be taken just like the OP proposed.

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2 points

Critical mass has high inertia.

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74 points

Not this again…

Lemmy isn’t everyones’ cup of tea. Reddit, despite the API shenanigans, still does what people want.

People are not moving here from Reddit if they haven’t already. They’d sooner go to Discord. Less cognitive load, and their subs already have servers set up. Lemmy has a 5 communities different servers for each sub and most will be inactive, so it’s already a losing battle.

Make Lemmy it’s own thing, rather than aspiring to be the 2nd head of the Hydra. Organic growth is good, sustainable. Boom and bust wholesale migrations look like failed hostile takeovers.

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25 points

People are not moving here from Reddit if they haven’t already.

I think you’re underestimating Reddit’s ability to continue degrading the Reddit experience with their ham-fisted attempts to maximize revenue.

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24 points

I don’t disagree with that. Reddit will keep burning bridges with it’s oldest users. old.reddit will be the next on the chopping block and that will be the death knell for desktop Reddit for a sizable number of people.

But I think you’re underestimating the average modern Redditor’s reluctance to jump ship. 3rd party apps were not even something they knew existed. Most never used reddit before the redesign. They already used the app. You cant miss what you never had.

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4 points
*

I agree on all points. But I‘d say both things can be true at the same time.

Maximize attention brought to lemmy as an alternative so that the last salvageable soul on reddit gets the message while not shooting for copying reddit (like actual copying of posts for example and recreating every sub etc).

While I am very much in agreement with your arguments, I feel like your rhetoric is a little black and white albeit entertaining. Yes, there will be people going to discord because mental load, yes there will be people unwilling but some might still not have gotten the message.

So I say keep telling them but don’t try to „sell it“ if that makes sense.

Edit: fixed half finished sentence

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2 points

I have looked at old.reddit.com recently and I loved it. Though I had never used it in past.

Now I can understand why people like it so much.

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18 points

I think you’re grossly overestimating the ability of FOSS to reach “regular” people. 99.9% of Redditors haven’t even heard of Lemmy. There are assuredly very many people using Reddit who would be very happy to switch to something better.

You’re not wrong with any of your points, I’m just saying there’s no reason to discourage a “get the word out” campaign. People can make their own choices, but only after they know what the options are.

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9 points

As someone who recently was wondering what my alternatives to Reddit were, then stumbling here recently, I think what we need is a good personality to do a 3 minute YouTube tutorial that gets out on Reddit.

I still don’t fully understand the difference between the two, but what I do know is encouraging. But it took effort to discover that difference. Reddit is apathetic. A three minute video may be short enough to get people to understand.

Just needs to show what it looks like (similar to Reddit with sync and I’m sure others), then a brief description of how it differs under the hood, and then how to set up an account and subscribe to a community.

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1 point

Have a look at this thread: https://old.reddit.com/r/unixporn/comments/1507unf/post_why_dont_reopen_here_completely/

People were being told to move to Lemmy, but they fiercely refused, sometimes being utterly agressive.

And this is a Unixporn community, which is supposed to be aware of FOSS.

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16 points

I think the problem was Lemmy didn’t have the apps in place ready to take advantage of reddits API deadline. Loads of people come to Lemmy but it wasn’t up to scratch yet. So they went back to what they already knew.

Now big apps like sync are on board. If they give lemmy another go I reckon they will stay this time.

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5 points

They open Sync, they they see they can’t post, they leave again.

I know post is coming in the next hours, but it’s the same for multireddits, instance blocking, account migration, etc.

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2 points

Assuming the prerequisite of joining Lemmy doesn’t skew this, people who post would be a small minitority. Might be similar for the other features you mentioned.

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1 point

This was basically me. Looked around for an app I liked, couldn’t find one for Lemmy but there was an okay-ish open source one for reddit. Used that for awhile but kept an eye on Lemmy.

My only issue now is that i want to ignore an couple instances (lemmynsfw, and the like) but I can’t… Can I? There isn’t enough content in “subscribed new” and find I’m going to “all new” but there’s too much NSFW… Maybe I’m on here too much.

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5 points

I had a similar experience.

I’m using “Connect.” For every post I see, there’s both a “block this community” and “block this instance” option. After I started making use of these, my feed (while still limited) became much more palatable. Presumably other apps have similar functionality, but I cannot comment definitively.

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7 points

I think a more appropriate approach is just to mention lemmy to your circles of friends and try to get any redditors you personally know to give lemmy a try, at least get the app installed so they can browse both reddit and lemmy. Lemmy won’t be able to handle millions upon millions of new people, especially ones with no guidance, but communities aren’t built overnight and we should do our best to get those who could use lemmy to use lemmy, one at a time. We shouldn’t be trying to overthrow reddit, just give a viable alternative to those willing to try one. It’s the more organic approach.

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2 points
*

Grass roots wins Vs marketing.

Make that healthy root system grow!

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70 points

Honestly, I would rather Lemmy attract its own community naturally rather than it be the place all redditors pipe into. I think most people who have already come from there can agree the culture is not really conductive to quality discussion, and we’ve started to see some of that leak into Lemmy as well.

Rather than just copy/paste reddit’s users and culture, we should try to develop both on their own. Create an environment that users want to spend their time on. Then through word of mouth on other platforms they entice people here. I don’t think just being the place redditors flood after every fuckup is healthy for the growth of the platform. As a Mastodon user, I’m kinda glad it isn’t the primary platform Twitter refugees are flocking to.

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11 points

What is “naturally”? I heard about Lemmy through reddit during the exodus. Was that unnatural?

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5 points

I’m not sure the culture aspect is unique to Reddit though. The culture seems more or less platform independent IMO.

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-8 points

Lemmy attract its own community naturally

Do you want to see more content, or you don’t?

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17 points

I personally want to see more good content. Quantity means nothing if the quality isn’t up to par.

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-6 points

more good content

Well, it still counts as “more content” which is usually on par with user count.

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12 points

I prefer 100 quality posters to 100,000 shitposters.

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69 points

Much the popular posts in lemmy are memes, shitpostings, or politics/technology news which we can easily obtain from other media. The way I see it, lemmy lacks experts, scientists, doctors etc that that can bring interest and credibility to the posts or threads. They can help generate quality contents, what lemmy lacks till now.

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12 points
*

fr, the best part of reddit were the ultra talented people, storywriters, artists etc. Also don’t forget the most popular post on reddit is “The senate” and a picture of palpatine

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5 points

You’re right that lemmy primarily needs content, and it doesn’t have to be just credentialed experts. It will grow in appeal the more there are real communities discussing whatever their subject of interest is.

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2 points

This is something lemdro.id focuses on as an instance but to technical content. Particularly the !android@lemdro.id community is ran by the same mod team as the r/android subreddit and what comes with that are the AMAs with industry experts, various authors of android content on XDA and more, and other various things. !android@lemdro.id is the premier source for Android news and technical content with the subreddit redirecting to there where reasonable

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2 points

I moved to my own forum because the alternatives are:

  1. Trust that the lemmy instance I choose won’t do the same thing reddit did.
  2. Host my own Lemmy instance.

For #2, Lemmy isn’t polished enough, so I went with a traditional forum option that’s been around for a while.

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