Spyke
lemmy.ca

Every comment I would make on Reddit seemed to get challenged by someone looking to start a long-winded argument as they were, in fact, the main character of the universe.

I like it here because so far, people are nice. It’s like the first day of high school and everyone just wants to be friends and meet people.

165
mander.xyz

No karma competition here. It has a bigger effect on behaviour than you'd think.

76
PerogiBoireply
lemmy.ca

It’s like a little trophy or a symbol of validity to some people. You’d see big edits addressing downvoted as if people got personally hit in the head with them.

I don’t blame people though because viscerally, these things are little tokens of “approval” by others at large.

32
slrpnk.net

Reddit gamified participation, and the result was an addiction to trying to say things that people would click the updoot for. Here, the comment / post score is used purely to determine the relevance and value of the individual comments and posts. I think the result is clear: people feel less compelled to post the meme, the shitpost, the expected something and are more likely to express a thought they have, or think is valuable to the conversation.

The result is less stuff, but the stuff is more nuanced, interesting, and engaging (even if the engagement metrics are lower). It's also a less stressful environment to interact with, and is just kinda all around better since no one is trying to profit

25
imaqtpiereply
sh.itjust.works

God, I love this place. Instead of having to navigate through a mob of idiots to express an opinion or have a discussion, it's simply informed, quality discussion from top to bottom. What a good feeling, almost gives me hope for humanity

10
PerogiBoireply
lemmy.ca

Cherish it now haha. If this place ever gets a lot more popular, you’ll start seeing all sorts of dumb takes and behaviours again 🤪

17
imaqtpiereply
sh.itjust.works

That's why I'm feeling a lot better about the steady rate of growth here. At first I just wanted to get everyone over from reddit ASAP, now I'm like okay, I could get used to the small town vibes with a bunch of cool people.

It's going to be an amazing journey as this place continues to grow. Just remember to laugh at the inevitable drama and cry at the bad memes. Never the other way around 🙃

7

Small town vibes is exactly how I’d put it haha. I tend to recognize a few posters here and there. Just like at my town’s post office 😂

5

Votes have a bandwagon effect, both up and down votes. Sometimes it just felt like arguing with an army of mute downvoting zombies; no reply, just downvotes. I completely understand some communities on Lemmy disabling downvotes, even if that means there is no mora a "controversial" vote.

My only fear is that as Lemmy gets bigger, the same botting, brigading and mindless bandwagoning, will also come here.

6
Scooter411reply
lemmy.ml

I feel like your characterization of Reddit users as long-winded and contrarian is inaccurate and frankly offensive. Let me write you several paragraphs about why you’re wrong, sprinkled with thinly veiled personal insults and outright harsh commentary about you as a person.

Sorry, just trying to make it feel like our old home :)

40
PerogiBoireply
lemmy.ca

Lmao this was good. You forgot to comb through my post history to see if you can make your comment even more hard-hitting by referencing a personal problem I have that was highlighted in a post or comment from 6 months ago 🤪

24
Tb0n3reply
sh.itjust.works

They're here. I got banned from no stupid questions for asking in the comments why an incredibly small group of people gets to define how I use language.

-5
Tb0n3reply
sh.itjust.works

If I remember correctly I was arguing that "gender assigned at birth" already had a word for it and it was sex. Somebody asked about intersex people. I said I didn't see the point in altering my language for such a vanishingly small group. Then a week later the powermod decided to look through my comments and came to the conclusion that I was breaking "rule 7" which is some vague shit about being nice or something. That was one of the things that made me abandon lemmy.world. Old reddit mindset. I left reddit 8 years ago because of that crap and never went back.

I say powermod because they have a over a dozen subs started basically all mirroring reddit ones.

-4
PerogiBoireply
lemmy.ca

Ya you absolutely deserved to catch flack for that.

You are saying that gender is the same as sex and they’re categorically different things. It’s very easy to learn the difference so if you insist on arguing against facts, you’re damn right people are going to butt against you.

You’re arguing against treating people with kindness by pointing to the fact that they’re a minority. Lmao that’s the definition of a bigot.

9

If I'm having a conversation with an intersex person that actually cares, which with their prevalence I doubt it will ever happen, I will respect them. Why should I have to change the language I use outside of such a rare situation? We have terms like Biological Sex which mean something, and then we have bullshit like "gender assigned at birth" which on purpose mean nothing. Stop trying to make language intentionally tiring.

-6

I completely agree with you. Now defend your point, which I've definitely attacked by replying. 🤺

2
Solairereply
lemmy.ml

As the antagonist of this thread, I would have to disagree with this statement. I was, initially, very dismayed to see that no one had taken issue with this comment. Alas, here I am, to set things right. Being that most online communities seem to revolve around my person, I thought that I’d share these thoughts that so many of you had been patiently awaiting.

No but fr, huge fan of these communities. The voices that search out an argument don’t seem to gain quite as much traction on fedi (yet, at least). Probably due to them having a larger overall audience on reddit to feel validated by. Hopefully it stays that way!

21

As the antagonist of this thread, I would have to disagree with this statement. I was, initially, very dismayed to see that no one had taken issue with this comment. Alas, here I am, to set things right. Being that most online communities seem to revolve around my person, I thought that I’d share these thoughts that so many of you had been patiently awaiting.

This killed me 🤣

Another big difference is the lack of vote fuzzing. It's more obvious when people are abusing the upvote/downvote function, and it feels more meaningful when you know each vote directly represents a real person.

On kbin you can even see publicly which user made each vote, but idk if that functionality is planned or possible on Lemmy. It's quite useful for combating brigading.

4
Derrekreply
lemmy.ml

I like I can say the words Tiannamen and Square and not feel like bots are out to get me 🙂

9

The misinfo on Reddit is wild. Just shows people don’t understand federation and how the views of one instances’ moderators doesn’t impact what people can say or do on other instances.

9
feddit.de

I‘m way more active here. I want that place to survive and become the new home for former redditors.

54
Knightfallreply
lemmy.ca

My day was good. And I posted on Lemmy a few times! Like this one!

2

Weird. I immediately deleted my comment after posting it. Two hours later, you still could answer it (and probably still can see it).

As an actual answer: I’m happy you had a good day!

2
lemmy.ml

Yes. It’s far less hostile here and I don’t fear getting downvoted to hell for asking a question.

38
Akureply
lemm.ee

Excellent point and I totally agree.

9

Or, to translate your comment to Redditese: "This." ;)

Mostly lurked on Reddit, trying to comment here and there on lemmy.

4

Yeah and lemmy still shows upvotes even if you get downvoted. Also it doesn’t automatically hide your comment if you get negative votes which I find annoying on Reddit

3

Deleted My reddit account , tried all of the fediverse before but always went back to propriety for same reason as anyone else. Everyone is there. With the Reddit exodus I feel this will get the push it needs

21

I'm not only commenting more (because I'm not afraid people will bite my head off for everything I say) I'm also reading a lot more comments in general. I think it's for the same reason, the comment threads seem to involve actual constructive discourse. It's funny that I read fewer posts here than I did at Reddit but I spend a lot more time per post.

19

because I’m not afraid people will bite my head off for everything I say

How dare you! This is an atrocious thing to say and you should feel bad /s

4

Yeah, this place sort of just has a better spirit right now. I hope it's able to hold onto this vibe as it grows.

3

Oh, don't worry. There's still plenty of people who will bite your head off or call you a "concern troll" for genuine opinions that go against the hive mind. Things are just slower.

3

You hit the nail on the head for me. I comment a lot more, I read more comments and all discussions seems to be way more constructive and people seem actually read eachothers points. I really hope this kind of interactions are here to stay, even when the ferdiverse grows.

2

I'm more active here. You can actually post comments without idiots being toxic about it for no reason. You can actually make posts without them getting removed for no reason. It's great.

19
lemmy.blahaj.zone

It feels like you can join in later. There are not thousands of replies in the first few hours. So commenting or participating was a waste of time before in many bigger subs. Noone would ever see your answer anyway or interact with you, so there was really no point.

Here it feels like you are actually participating in some way. I really like it.

19
lemmy.ml

That’s true - Lemmy displays new comments above “top” comments, allowing them to be seen by everyone.

5

You can change the sorting, I actually have this post sorted by "top" right now.

1

Yeah, the default sorting behavior contributes quite a bit.

4

Posting on reddit felt kinda like lurking most of the time. Here it's indeed different, as people tend to answer questions etc. that are made in comments.

1

When I joined Lemmy I decided I wanted to engange with the community here on Lemmy, since I on Reddit I just lurked, so I'm much more active here.

18

Not yet. My niche communities don’t exist in the fediverse yet like they do on Reddit, and I do not have the bandwidth to start new communities right now. Excited to watch it grow and continue to contribute where I can.

16

I was a 10 year lurker on reddit. Now I have my own Lemmy instance

15

Reddit comments just get washed away by millions of other users. Where as in this place it's not as competitive so yea I understand what you mean.

14

I feel the lack of (public?) karma will at least help with the repost bots here. That is, if you buy the "bots needing karma to look legit" or the "needs to gather karma to post in some subs" arguments. I've always found those to be very weird as no sub I've seen needs several thousand karma to post and most bots still look like bots.

Competition for karma sounds like more of the same problem with bots: lots of low effort posts to rise those numbers

1

I posted a showerthought mostly to try how posting works. It seemed to be at the top of... is there a /r/all equivalent here?

Anyway, it was visible enough my sister found my account. It kinda feels like moving from a giant metropolis to a village.

3

I am because I feel it's great to be a part of the growing numbers of the platform. Everything is a bit rough around the edges and it gives it a 'far west' feel

13

Lemmy still feels really easygoing, kind of feels like Reddit in 2011.

12

The number of times I have written a long comment and then simply deleted it before posting is too high.

Lemmy just has a better vibe? Idk

12

I used to be pretty active on Reddit and I kinda became more and more "sour" and unfriendly over there, because the whole community just dragged me down for some reason.

Here, it's like a breath of fresh air and most people are actually quite nice. Topics have finally become more interesting and there's no such thing as an echochamber. Critical thinking seems to be possible here, as well.

So yes, I became way more active again since I'm on Lemmy. Also, I host my own instance and I put a lot of effort into it, so I want it to be in good standing with other instances. Participating in friendly conversations will help with that.

12

I feel like I can contribute more since the communities are smaller, but I haven't had much of value to say. Haven't really found my niche yet like I had on Reddit.

12

I want to comment more but I often don't have much to say. I've made it a goal to comment more though, because I want to see this platform succeed.

I love the enthusiasm in this thread but if we the mass migration of reddit users that I am hoping for, the toxicity and annoying reddit behaviors are probably coming along with them. I am hopeful that this place will at least stay much more open and free.

12
lemmy.ml

Yea. Literally every reddit comment I posted resulted in someone replying to me in a toxic way.

I've only blocked one person on lemmy and that's because they were replying to me in a toxic manner. That's the first reply I've had that's toxic, and I nipped it in the bud. I don't care to have fighting matches back and forth.

Have you noticed if you go to Reddit and click on any thread, usually within the first comment thread, someone will be hating on another person? Fuck that.

I'd honestly suggest everyone block anyone who is being toxic. Not to mention, others don't want to see your drama while looking through comments.

11
slrpnk.net

Furthermore, it's great that you can block someone without reporting them here. You can just kinda look at a comment history and be like “None of this is rule breaking, but you're just a jerkass, and I do not care to associate with you.” Further, you can block communities without that being a damnation of that community. Don't know German? Just block the German communities and they won't show in your feed. It's not because they're bad subs, and you want them to go away. You just don't care about them

6
lib.lgbt

There's a setting that let's you see English only without having to block i think. I know if you post in English and select "post language" as English only those who set English see and German set language will not. :)

2
slrpnk.net

I've set that, but a bunch of them have their language set as undefined. That's fine. I don't mind it. It's just nice to be able to easily and quickly filter out my feed to the set of posts that I can literally make sense of and that my brain doesn't register as impossible to read mystery language

2
jarfilreply
lemmy.ml

Hm, I'm using Jerboa and just realized there seems not to be a way to choose any language, anywhere. Does this comment appear as English, or undefined?

I also can speak several languages, and read a few some more, wonder how would that need to be set. There was also supposed to be an option to automatically translate stuff, I think?

1

I don't see any language tag on this comment, so i assume undefined, but idk how to easily tell

2
lemmy.world

I also hate how every post you make you would instantly have an automod comment saying the rules.

2

That could still come to Lemmy, if posts start being seen by hundreds of thousands of people, particularly if they come from instances which don't share the same netiquette as the one the post is made on. Of course there's defederation to fight that, but I feel like it can only go so far.

1

Been trying to go out of my way to be more active on here. Help the platform grow ya know?

I usually lurk for months at a time then comment once or twice a year on any forum.

11

Gonna have to buck the trend and say, no.

I had good experiences on Reddit, I was active in a few different communities and had good engagement without the 'avalanche of toxic responses' some people here are describing.

I'm leaving Reddit due to the changes at the top, not because of problems at the grass roots.

11

Yeah I'm easy more active here that on Reddit, though I was very active when Reddit was younger. It just got too big and lost that feeling of taking to actual people and contributing to the overall experience.

10

Yes! English is not my first language, so commenting on Reddit made me nervous. I find Lemmy to be more forgiving (if that makes sense?) as well.

10

Undoubtedly! I was always more of a lurker, but I think I've posted as many comments here in the last couple of weeks as I did in 11 years of Reddit... Lemmy is, somehow, much more inviting.

10

Yes. Got to the point on reddit where I almost never commented because of the ackshually types.

10

I think so. I feel the camaraderie is much higher here as well, since we’re all refugees together in a sense, but also part of a great new thing.

10

Still trying to “find my place” here but I am enjoying the whole thing. Lots of awesome discussions popping up and great conversation here.

10

After the reddit apolcalypse and blackouts. I became less active over there. I still check some subreddits from time to time. But, my activity is low. I only have time to be active in one social network at a time. I chose lemmy.

9

I’m making myself be active here. I’m learning to build my own lemmy instance on a VPS.

I want there to be a sea change in social media. I want an authentic intellectual conversation. I was in college during the usenet era and found it easy to find mind expanding stuff there with a minimum of toxicity.

My hope is the community and software mature steadily together until it is ready to handle a significant influx.

Let’s not reward toxicity. We need to steer the conversation and the software development to reward quality engagement over quantity.

9

Current Lemmy feels a lot more like early reddit. At the same time I don't think it has hit its Eternal September moment. The site is still primarily the domain of early adopters and people who care about the community.

9

Yes. I'm looking forward to more original content rather that all of the reposts from reddit. I'm not sure when that tipping point will be, but I hope it doesn't have to do anything with poo.

9

Oh, absolutely! I did a lot of consuming on Reddit, and only participated in a couple specific communities.

Here, I feel far more inclined to actively participate.

9
lemmy.ml

Definitely.

For example, I've just written and posted a comment in this very thread. That's more than I'd ever do in a thread like this on Reddit.

9
lemmy.fmhy.ml

Reddit comment threads are currently just full of groupmind wankery. I like being on a platform where I don't 100% agree with everyone and I don't have to hold "sanctioned" opinions that are approved by a mod team of 3.

9

Reddit was so American too, all the arguments and things seemed to be through their world view. The fediverse should allow much more diversity, and be a bit more multicultural

4

Americans are the largest English speaking group, as long as we're in the English part of Lemmy, Americans will still be the largest group.

1

Reddit unironically gives me 1984 as it’s about to get worse from here on out.

2

I was a straight up lurker on reddit, I feel like this environment makes me wanna be more active, reminds me of the old days before websites were a cash grab and there was true communities

8

Here people actually react to what I post and write. And they react to the best possible interpretation of what I wrote, not the worst. And even if we disagree, we can still have a nice conversation.

Does anyone have a good theory about why the threadiverse is so much friendlier? Is it only because it's smaller? Is it because of the kind of people a new platform like this attracts? Because there is no karma? Maybe something else?

8

My theory is that it's a combination of a few factors:

  1. Smaller communities mean you're likely to interact with the same people. Even if people don't consciously think about it, they don't want to be known as "that guy"

  2. The first wave leaving Reddit were those most dissatisfied with how it worked, and are more committed to making this place work

  3. Honeymoon phase. People are being far nicer and more considerate as it's a new platform

If we can keep maybe 1/4 of that as the platform grows and changes, I'd take that as a win.

8
lemmy.ml

I made two post on Reddit in like 2008 or something. One day I’ll have made ten posts here.

8

I need some more time, I am pretty shy both irl and online and I kinda liked hiding behind tens of other users. But maybe I will grow to like this

8
lemmy.ml

I never posted or commented on Reddit. Trying to get in the habit here. This community seems like a better one to be involved in.

8
lemmy.ml

I'm not as active as I was on Reddit, but to be honest, I like it. I went from spending 5/6 hours scrolling on Reddit, to 1 hour a day on Lemmy.

8
Xeonreply

Agreed, the work I do allows me to just have a tab open and browse it in between, so yeah, been wasting quite some time a day on there.

2
programming.dev

I find myself commenting much more here than I did on reddit. I think that is because I want this to be successful and I want to be able to be done with reddit.

8

I've had 2 accounts already on Lemmy and have posted more in one day than in one year on Reddit (mostly lurking).

It feels much smaller and cosier. It's less intimidating to actually participate here.

7

I surprise myself that I'm more active on lemmy than on reddit.

7
lemmy.tr00st.co.uk

In the 13 years I've had a Reddit account, I made 40 comments, and 4 posts.

In the 15 days I've had a Lemmy account, I've made 28 comments and 1 post.

Now I wouldn't want to be one for extrapolating from data of different timescales, but...

7

Every time I made a post on Reddit was to ask a question I couldn’t find from someone else who asked the same question. Here I can actually participate and feel connected to the people I talk to.

1

I am definitely more active on here than Reddit. I’ve had the same experience as you but I’m tired of gawking at those know it all cockbags. They’ll be here at some point but yeah, it’s a nice community here.

7

Oh yeah, I was telling my wife this exact thing. I feel like I can comment and post way more than I used to and get in discussions cause my comments won't be drowned out as much and when I do see a post it doesn't already have 3k comments on it already like in reddit. A lot more intelligent conversation too which is a nice change.

Edit: sorry about the second comment, my instance isn't updated and is having issues. Tried deleting the second comment but it won't let me lol

7

Only reason I visit reddit now is to see how the dumpster fire is going

7

I used to use Reddit through throwaway accounts. Was never a regular user, and moved away from it over a year ago now. Just stopped posting to socials a lot.

Mental health has gotten better, and I've been more active here than I ever was on Reddit because I just enjoy the vibes the place gives me overall.

7
lemmy.ca

Yes, absolutely. I'm still not sure if it's because the whole community is smaller here, the people are better, no Karma competition, or a combination of all the above

7
JshKlsnreply
lemmy.ml

no Karma competition

EDIT: THANKS FOR THE DOWNVOTES YOU IDIOTS.

EDIT 2: LMAO LIKE I CARE ABOUT DOWNVOTES, KEEP THEM COMING

EDIT 3: YOUR DOWNVOTES FUEL ME

...

EDIT 99: comment removed by user

It's always funny, because they will be at -1 and cry like they don't care, but then delete the comment because they want it to stop lmao.

9

Funny the is, the instance i an on or that this is posted on has no down votes only upvote, forever positivity mwuahahahahahaaa!!

1

I was a lurker on Reddit. I had less than 500 Karma when I deleted my 12-year-old account a couple weeks ago.

I've already been more active on Lemmy than I was my entire time on Reddit. Everything here just feels more genuine.

7

I'm definitely trying to be, which isn't difficult considering that my last comment there was a year ago, and I only made 5 comments that year.

I'd been on reddit for 11 years, and I was more active back then, but I sort of started to just lurk more as time went by, probably because there was an ocean of comments in every post

6

My level of activity on Reddit has been wanting. I was / am still fairly active in some niche subs, but I used to be pretty active in AskReddit, askmen, and several other spaces.

I've made a concerted effort to be more active here, and it feels nice! Feels a lot more human

6

100%. I've always been a lurker but on lemmy, and I don't know why, but I feel more comfortable interacting and making comments. Haven't made a post yet. Maybe one day

6

On Reddit I was afraid to comment or post because of the inevitable onslaught of users who would try to start a keyboard fight on the most trivial of topics. It hindered me from just sharing any kind of opinion or cool accomplishment to the point where I would just comment with a one-word or one-liner in hopes it's not petrol. Getting shit on turns you in to a lurker. I've engaged more on Lemmy in the past 2 weeks than I have on Reddit in years. I like it here.

6

About the same, however engagement here seems to be easier and better all around. Have only run into 1 or 2 pedantic assholes as opposed to reddit being like 80% pedantic assholes.

6

I've been spending more time here. Could be the newness factor or maybe it's just more engaging. It's going to be a lot different only because of the smaller population. I think Reddit may have been too big for its own good.

6
lemmy.world

Absolutely, I'm way more active on here. Reddit is so oversaturated, it's impossible to comment on a post before it already has hundreds of comments unless you have time to sit in New and comment as submissions come in. Here, I feel like someone will actually read what I write. Thanks for reading!

6
Krompusreply
lemmy.world

Eh, not usually an issue on smaller subs, but yeah the comments in huge subs are often full of predictable inane garbage, unless the mods are actively keeping it on-topic, such as r/askhistorians etc.

It's nice being here while it's still small and watching it grow. Excited for the future. :)

2

Yes, the smaller subs are definitely better, and I think r/askhistorians is legendary for their moderation. All good lessons for us to learn as lemmy grows!

1

I believe in the non-corp nature of this. While they it didn't fumble as bad as Digg did, Reddit will continue to enshittify itself. For that, I'm playing the long game. I've made 2 niche communities here, have held myself to making just 1 new post a day in each, crossposting the one that has a sister community, and will respond to any who comment. I have enough content for each that I could post all day for months, but I'm not going to burn out or get bored. I'll still be here a year from now, as long as this place is still around.

5

Might be a case of "grass is always greener." I feel like more eyes and engagement happens for my posts and comments on Reddit. Over here it feels empty yet full, which is weird.

5
Pechentereply
lemmy.ml

Really? For me it's the opposite effect. You usually don't get crazy amounts of engagement like on reddit where a post can have hundreds of upvotes and comments but on average, I feel like I'm getting more engagement and more valuable engagement.

4

I think this might be due to the algorithms for sorting comments since there always seems to be too many meaningful comments but low upvotes to signal quality to others. More specifically I think it's harder to go viral here.

1
lemmy.ml

I'm certainly not as depressed after scrolling here as opposed to redditt. The magic pixie wranglers at Lemmy don't seem to be as centered on eyeballs on the screen sucking your soul while you're doom scrolling. I'll take it as a win.

5
sh.itjust.works

Reddit's winning formula: repost, repost, Trump, repost, fight video, repost, repost, social media drama

I've noticed lately that it's just trying to raise the temperature in the room. It has become facebook

6
feddit.de

Yeah that's true. I get that US politics can be entertaining and lead to funny tweets, but the content inevitably makes you feel worse than before. It's all so gloomy and brings out the worst in people. Doesn't help that seemingly everyone is somewhat of a lunatic.

I also don't get the fight posts. Sure you can block them for yourself, but just having them constantly on r/all for the entire platform to see can't be good for the general climate.

Uplifting News is also often more fit for the Boring Dystopia subreddit, which I quit after a few weeks because the constant stream of negativity was slowly affecting my views and just worsened the experience for me.

All these types of content exist because they showcase a part of life, but the intensity and frequency are significantly elevated above the everyday norm. I wouldn't want that content to be restricted, but I also think platforms need to make sure they create mostly positive places of community. I feel much more inclined to contribute if the overall feeling of the communities is inviting and open-minded, not overly cynical or divided.

Emotional and negative content simply gets tons of views and engagement and it's therefore often in the best interest of platforms to push it to the top for everyone to interact with.

My silent hope is that that might be different for lemmy and that we can keep a more positive attitude among each other because of it.

2

There is currently no incentive to drive engagement other than people enjoying community participation in lemmy. Reddit wants eyeballs, and the bots want karma, so they post what's gonna keep people, scared, angry and insecure.

1

1000%!

I actually created a community for a hobby of mine, and have been trying to post and comment more.

5

Absolutely. As much as I loved Reddit, I always felt drowned out due to the large user base and was hesitant to share my opinion. Thanks to Lemmy and its (currently) smaller communities, I feel like my voice has wider reach or, at the very least, less aggressive competition.

5

I think the biggest difference here is that I keep getting surprised by how civil most of the discussions are.

5

I am definitely feeling more motivated to participate here. It feels like a very welcoming environment so far.

5

I would like to be, want to try to come out of my shell some on here and interact more than just voting…

5

I have not been on reddit since the protest, but I didnt post or comment a lot anyway so probably not much of an impact

5

Yes because we need to drive the content machine here otherwise this place looks stale

5

Tip for when Lemmy becomes bigger: Find a niche community that's big enough you get seen, but small enough you get noticed.

5

I feel more obligated to contribute here because I want Lemmy as a whole to be more active. More content = more users.

5

I have been posting more than I ever had on Reddit. Mostly because I got my news from Reddit, but over here I have to bring the news to Lemmy.

5

Depends, I was mainly active on small subreddits that were focused on things I was interested in. Here those small subs don't exist yet (or are very inactive), but the lower overall user count means I'm interacting with a lot more communities than I would on reddit.

5

Yes because:

  1. I want to see it take off and want to do my bit
  2. It feels like a more chilled environment in which to participate
5
lemmy.ca

i feel most of the people that actually made the jump to lemmy are the more mature and calmer crowd as compared to your average Redditor

4
imgprojtsreply
lemmy.ml

This is an incorrect assessment of the facks. I believe it to be the same people that hate reddit for banning them....and me. You know... Good people 😁. People who like and say weird shit. People who find useful ways to use reddit....and then reddit finds out it's useful and replaces you with a bot or someone else.....

Reddit's modo should be "build our communities! And get the fuck out! They're our communities!"

I am the former admin for r/keitruck and r/Seattlegay. One day I started to notice hate messages. I might have replied. Then I noticed a deluged of that until one morning I got a message saying I was banned. I spent all my fun pandemic free time building those two places. So fuck reddit.

3

Since signing up on Lemmy three days ago, I think I've posted on here more times than I have on Reddit over the past 2-3 years.

4
lemmy.ml

I was only active on certain small subreddits, here I am active in more different communities.

4
smortreply
feddit.nl

Me too, but mainly because my favorite small subreddits (hobbies and local) just don’t exist here. :(

Or at least I haven’t been able to find them.

2

Yeah that is indeed true unfortunately. I think small communities will be around eventually, it just takes time.

2

Smaller community means my post or comment is actually likely to be seen. I've been participating way more.

4

I didn't even have an account on reddit for the last few years because I was getting too active and I could feel the karma cravings so I just deleted my account and lurked using old.reddit.com.

4

Oh for sure. It definitely seems like people are more level-headed over here, and are less likely to find the most nitpick-y thing to jump into an argument with you over.

(Which, to clarify, I don't mean someone correcting information I've posted - of course, if I've posted something incorrect I'd like to know - but even then, there is always a tactful way to go about doing so)

4

I feel like the nays will be underrepresented bc of selection bias so I'll be one.

So far I have not had the same engagement. But I am convinced that is bc I have yet to get used to the jerboa UI/UX. I am more active once I feel at home, was the same for reddit, is the same for lemmy.

Its great that you feel more impactful on lemmy! I think on reddit you either feel the way you have or are constantly being called a slur (say "tankie") and removed/banned left and right.

So far lemmy seems way more authentic to me. Less capital interest, PR companies, bots, astroturf, think tank/gov-adjacent hacks. I like that.

Alos writing this made me realize my mode of commenting is still very much a reddit one

4

I feel like I am not yet, but I will be. Some of the subs I have on Reddit aren’t here yet, partly because they’re either niche or liked by a lot of people that are less tech literate including their maintainers.

I have gone trough some instances before deciding on my current one and I like the stance of most that are for an active discussion, against mindless downvotes and for overall more communication than social media consumption.

The fact that there is next to no automated account making will also help in the long run I think. It makes it an less attractive target for the bad kind of bots imo.

4

I am, absolutely, less intimidating. Remember there are literally dozens of us.

4

Me, by far.

In Reddit: dropped mod position years ago. Used uBlock Origin to remove the voting buttons, as they're pointless. The only threads that I've created were in r/RedditAlternatives, near the end. Create account, comment as I feel in the mood to comment, shred its content, repeat every ~3 months. Extremely rude tone towards anyone showing the smallest sign of shallow thinking, wishful thinking, or similar character flaws. Scaling up arguments for the sake of why not.

Here: moderating three comms. Actively voting. Creating threads fairly often, specially in the comms that I mod. Trying to keep a polite tone and contribute as long as I can. I've only got a single potential fight (against an extremely trashy user - assumptive, with poor reading, but still screeching like he was in Reddit), and even then I simply told myself "meh, why bother".

4

Yes, to put my money where my mouth is.

In early 2022, a few months prior to the first rumors Elon Musk might acquire Twitter, I left both Twitter and Reddit for the Fediverse, making it a point to contribute a tiny bit of the content and interaction that help platforms reach critical mass.

In case you're wondering, I left Twitter because the algorithms had made me essentially invisible. There was no point posting or interacting there.

4

I haven't browsed Reddit since a couple of weeks now. I am definitely more active on Lemmy.

4

Yes, I am significantly more active here than I was on Reddit (at least recently, my decline on posting/commenting on Reddit started a few years ago).

3

i definitely agree! being part of a growing community is a special feeling. although i had been on reddit for about ten years, it felt like by the time i joined, the community was already established and any comments i made got drowned out by a sea of other comments. here, it feels easier to be "seen".

3

I have not touched reddit since this debacle... I added a bunch of subreddits to my RSS reader, but I'm honestly not looking at it.

Unfortunately searching for information often brings me to a reddit post, but I'm trying to avoid it and so far found the information elsewhere.

3

I'm not sure it matters more TBH... but I basically stopped Reddit for 2 days, and now just get drawn back to read the occasional post - but don't bother commenting.

With the downtick in Reddit, I remembered that I hadn't read a book for a month or two, so I headed over to Annies Archive and grabbed a bunch to add to my Kindle...

So I now downloaded 3 versions of 'Great Expectations' and am reading that book before watching them - but also have "Welcome to the MonkeyHouse" by Kurt Vonnegut and "The Book Thief" grabbed from Annie's Archive.

Basically now I'm spending less than half the time on net than I was before.

3

Lemmy just feels better to comment/interact with. I just feel more motivated to be active on here.

3

Looking forward to a fresh start and also looking forward to a new Sync lemmy app too.

3

This is my second comment since joining this morning, so yes, significantly more active.

3

Im more active when I'm here and I spend less time online overall. I spend less time angry.

Although probably here still a bit too much. I should go touch grass but to fair it's over 110 F outside and I have to be near my laptop for work so, here I sit.

3

For what it's worth, I posted once on Reddit in the last year (and that was related to Sync shutting down) where as I've posted 4 times so far here.

I'm generally a lurker but perhaps the newness of it makes me feel that my posts won't be drowned out so it makes it more worthwhile taking the effort.

3

I'm generally less active here right now, but I feel like I'm more free to speak my opinion, overall the community here just feels friendlier

3
lemmy.fmhy.ml

I am a bit more active here than I was in Reddit because I feel like here we don't really find the toxicity we had on Reddit, at least in my opinion.

3

I did more shitposting on Reddit but I do more seriousposting here. I haven't found people with a similar sense of humor here yet. But I enjoy the conversations about the fediverse.

3

I am! Feels like a fresh start. Also, wanting to stay active to make a better community.

3

I’m not active on Reddit at all, so I’m definitely more active here. And I agree, the community here is a much better fit, so far at least.

3
aussie.zone

My local cities daily thread is more active than it what's left on Reddit, despite the Reddit community having 600k subs. 410 comments on the Reddit thread, 480 on the lemmy community thread.

It's been like this daily.

3

I wouldn’t say I’m any less “lurk-y” than I was on Reddit, but here just feels like a group of friends hanging out. Feels more friendly :)

3

I agree, and am more active here than rdit.

3

This is the third time I've responded on lemmy, this makes me three times more active than I was on reddit.

3

I was mostly active on askreddit and haven't found a good asklemmy replacement yet. I'm also dumb and don't understand lemmy that well so I might be missing something obvious

3

Yeah, I mean, I'm not the most active, but I made a sublemmy (I'm still not sure about the naming convention here lol) and that's something I never did on Reddit, because everything was usually already there in some form. I also did it to contribute, because I know that us being active actually counts for something. On Reddit I could go months without posting or commenting. So yes, I'm definitely more active and it feels like you are actually engaging with other people and not just consuming content.

2

Honestly, not really, but I also was crazy active on reddit. Now I haven't posted anything there for the past week and I also completely removed Infinity from my phone. Bye bye reddit

2

The smaller the community, the bigger the impact of your opinions.

For example, just on my own, I can reach a good 50% impact on anything I say unless my wife says something different.

2

Have recently made the jump from Reddit. With a brilliant 3rd party app - go figure!! I expect to be more active here.

2

Yes. Smaller community, and generally more intelligent, or at least more capable of having a meaningful discussion.

I think it's something that happens when you throw a larger group of people together, like reddit, where people act a bit different ime

Even I am less toxic, and more positive. Something about reddit messed that up.

Atp, I'm here more for discourse than any specific content, and that's something I really missed about social media.

2

I'd mostly comment on shitposts, and there's less here so I feel like I comment less

2

I've never been much of a poster (not even 2 posts/yr for the almost dozen years I've had a reddit habit), but I was a regular commenter in various specific-interest subs.

I am, as a rule, no longer contributing content to Reddit, since they've made it clear they plan to finish their transition from "hosting communities" to "extracting value from users." Frankly, it's not as much of an imposition as I feared, because many of those communities seem to be broadly taking the same attitude.

I'm actively trying to comment heavily here to to try to help establish communities. If I had a little more free time I'd do some posting and/or try to help spin some successor communities for my interests.

2

I am definitely less active on Reddit, to the point of absence from posting/commenting. However, I am not very active here either. I have encouraged others on Mastodon to join Lemmy but I acknowledge that it's not as mature as a Reddit replacement, as Mastodon is as a twitter replacement. Definitely both systems are getting better and hopefully, we can move our social networking to the fediverse 100% by 2024.

2

Honestly, I'm trying to be more active in here. The whole defederation thing going around has me confused about where my account lives and replicating what's on it. Makes it hard to stay active if I don't know what's going to happen haha

2

Absolutely, by necessity. Can’t really take it for granted that being a lurker won’t overall impact the site. Unfortunately, my usual subs that I participate in haven’t yet made the leap of faith, so its hard to provide quality contribution until that improves

2

back to a level of activity i would call my "normal". hasn't been like this in almost a decade.

2

I'm a lot more active then I was on Reddit.

I was very active in the subs of the games I play (I'm even r/CSRRacing2 mod) when I started there, but I'm getting tired of the hate, stupidity,...

2

Most of my Reddit commenting was done on threads for people looking for advice in one of my hobbies. I generally had a good experience giving feedback here since most people in the subreddit were level headed. Sometimes you got the occasional asshole parroting the usual online "best way to do something" that goes against some people's actual real life experience that is being shared.

I didn't really make any meaningful (non joke) comments outside of this subreddit since I didn't feel like getting some dick in my notifications trying to start a fight over whatever I posted. Sometimes I didn't mind battling the dicks in the hobby subreddit since people lurking can actually learn or get a different perspective from "No, you shouldn't take what's in a listicle as fact. Here is my experience with this."

2

For me it was always difficult to be active on R so the atmosphere here is much more pleasant.

2
Cas
vlemmy.net

I never posted on Reddit. Every time I did it was a bad time. I could post the most innocuous thing imaginable (The sky is blue. Water is wet), and without fail have at least a few people telling me I was stupid, naive, woke, a Nazi, whatever. There is a ton of extremist energy around here too, but the radical left is much easier for me to stomach than the radical right.

2
SinJab0nreply
mujico.org

But the water isn't wet dude, it's humid.

(Oh sht, I have been lurking a little and apparently my comment is the kind people is tired of. Please confirm me I'm not that guy)

2
Casreply
vlemmy.net

Nah man. You're good. It was funny. Plus I sort of asked for it.

1

So I truly believe that Reddit just got too big to the point where it prevented me from engaging very much. I’d say about 80-90% of my posts were ignored or I’d see a similar thought to my own and not even bother writing a response. The smaller subs were a bit better, but most of the time it felt like whispering in a hurricane. There were some good moments where I’d time it right and get a ton of upvotes and replies which was fun, but it was so few and far between that trying to engage at all on Reddit was a pretty lonely experience most of the time.

In Lemmy however I know that there are people actually reading my replies instead of just getting my comment thrown to the bottom of a massive pile of comments stacked on top of it. There’s definitely value to that, and I think separate instances will continue to support the small town vibe.

There’s a downside though, and it really comes down to searching for answers or guidance to anything you’re curious about. It’ll take Lemmy ten years to get to the point where there’s enough historical data to rival the amount of useful info that Reddit has.

2

Nah. Thankfully my mindless scrolling time has taken a dive, which is an issue I had been meaning to address regardless.

2

I am more actif here than on reddit. There was a time on reddit I stopped even upvotes and down votes when I noticed they are changing philosophy. Here I post more stuff and wrote more comments. Sometimes to add value to discussions and sometimes just for the sake of commenting and getting activity rolling.

2

Yes, I didn't have an account and I always browsed via a proxy (Teddit). I didn't want to be manipulated by the algorithm.

2

I think I'm about as active here as I was on Reddit. Always was more of a reader.

2

I definitely am. I may have more comments and posts here than on Reddit already and I have only been here a fraction of the time.

2

It does help that I can share all my crusty but hand-picked imgur memes and people are actually enjoying them. I have even begun thinking about ways to create OC, something I never did on Reddit. Feels great to fuel the meme machine!

1

So far trying to find my old communities I would run with, can’t seem to find all of them.

I did once find /r/FeedTheBeast on lemmy but no longer can find it on here!

Once I get my rotation I will def use this way more.

2

Agreed - stopped posting and sharing on Reddit a while ago. I engage more and find this place more engaging. It’s good!

2

Absolutely, but that is expected. The community is much smaller here. How many times did you go to a post on Reddit to make a comment only to find someone else had already said it. That is less likely here so you naturally have more to contribute.

2

Definitely, I was a lurker or Reddit except for the occasional question to a programming subreddit.

2

Have been wanting to say this for a while, but same here! I feel like Lemmy is much more tight-knitted and closer than Reddit because it is just smaller!

2

My 2-week old lemmy account is already more active than my 10-year-old reddit account. I love this place!

Also, I just tried to check my old main reddit account, and noticed it's suspended. I made 0 posts regarding reddit's mismanagement of this situation, 0 endorsements for lemmy.. just haven't logged in there since the API announcement. Oh well 🤷‍♂️ Can't say I'll miss it.

2

Much more active here for sure. I was more of a lurker on Reddit. I'm not sure why, but I'm just way more active here. Perhaps I want Lemmy to succeed and so I'm doing my part.

2

I've found myself commenting here more because there's less people. Which means they're way nicer and it doesn't feel like I'm just screaming into the void.

2

I definitely am posting more too. Id like to think this because this will turn out to be a much more genuine community than reddit, but i think there is a chance that this just dies down in the coming months. Hoping for the former of course.

2

I’m only a new transfer but all of these comments are making me feel like I want to begin to take part here now as well!

2

The 2 communities that I have an interest in isn't on lemmy so I tend to use both lemmy and reddit the same amount.But my mindless scrolling has decreased dramatically

1

Yes, my screen of time have surpassed Reddit since long ago... And with multiple Lemmy apps!

1

I feel no difference, I still comment as much as on reddit with the difference that people are more open here and more welcome.

1

I post more for sure. Not a lot,but here I'll actually engage here, unlike reddit. I feel like actually investing the time to engage a little bit

1

I must admit the view of the PC site is growing on me and it looks very concise and put together. If the upvoting quirks can get worked out it'll be great. Happy that once i've viewed comments (like now) this thread will vanish after <3

Even RES old.reddit was annoying to me, very ugly - lemmy looks fresh.

Once the apps get fully fledged, it's off to the races. Well...I already am #Memmyarmy

Also I gave up commenting on reddit, more or less every single time some snippy cunt tries to start an argument over the smallest thing. Exhausting shit...

1

I'm not very active yet as there are only a few subs that match. Once there are more...

1

I only commented on reddit when I saw something so dumb I couldn't help myself or even my opinion when against the grain.

On lemmy I comment on most posts and my comments are far more pleasant.

1

Yes, definitely. Maybe I feel like my contributions matter more since we are all trying to make this a viable platform? I dunno, but it's definitely more fun interacting here than on reddit.

1

I’m so glad to finally join! Signup was tricky and finally got Memmy working for ios. Happy days

1

I’ve commented here more than I did in 12 years. Separately, I like the discussion topics, and it’s more engaging to me. I found that Reddit (though still has great information) definitely shifted to an entertainment focus along the way. Maybe 2016ish??

1

More active here, i never got onto the idea of reddit, always made me uncomfortable for some reason.

I did use 3rd party apps like slide or infinity to read reddit posts and follow sibreddits i liked.

1

Just started today, but as my reddit activity is going down to zero …. Yes lol

1

To some extent, yeah. It feels like a more tight-nit community here.

1

There are certainly less "competition". On Reddit, while I was trying to comment something, my opinion was probably written somewhere in the thousand of comments. At some points I just read and read, and lost my motivation for contributing.

But here at Lemmy, we're still at the early days, so I'm trying my best to make the community more "lively".

1

Yes and no.

Yes, because if I find something interesting I have been more likely to comment here then on Reddit.

No, because the gaming subs I follow have not moved over here. For example, planetside makes up ~12% of my comment karma on Reddit.

1

Yup, way more active. I used to mainly lurk on reddit. Now I'm commenting more and have actually posted a couple of times.

1
lemmy.world

I will be once Apollo is shut down. Right now, I'm sifting through the hundreds of subscribed subreddits I have in Reddit to see if they've any official communities for them here. If anyone can direct me to stable diffusion instances, I would be grateful.

1

I’m trying to be more active. It doesn’t come naturally as I’m generally a lurker. Good vibes help though

1

Not yet. Not only is there less content, but also a stupid amount of rehashed content. Like people seem to be trying too hard to replicate everything they did on reddit and end up just copying stuff over.

There's some nice big communities here, but the more niche stuff is much harder to replace with the smaller userbase.

1

Yes. I was a Reddit lurker but am much more active on Lemmy. Feels like a nicer/smaller community.

1

Absolutely! There's some feeling of ownership now that I can host an instance of my own - I want this platform to succeed, I want to give something back to the open source community, even if it's only a small server.

1

Yes. I gradually disengaged over the years. I will become less active once the pump is primed. Perhaps turn to more technical aspects, as maintaining my own instance. Or be more offline in general.

1

It'll be interesting to see where this goes, if the people here are "getting in on the ground floor" of something or just joining something doomed to slowly fade into obscurity.

1

If I simply say yes, it'll be a bit misleading. Since I've deleted my Reddit account recently, I can only post here. But I'm not only only posting here. I'm also more happy to do so.

1

Yes, though I know it’s only temporary. Once we’re done with poop and beans, it’ll just take the place of Reddit and I’ll chill out.

1

My reddit account was soft locked for months barring me from any interaction, just lurk.

I never fixed it because i was wasting to many hours on debates. Yesterday i told my wife i was going to come downstairs after finishing my reply. It took 30minuts.

Lemmy is great and i love interacting with it but honestly i wouldn’t mind a bot that helps me to stop now and then. This cant be good for my mental health in the long run otherwise.

1

Yup. Also, it’s nice that the people who do bring the Reddit toxic behavior here get called the fuck out here

1

I've been surfing more on Lemmy than on Reddit now, but that being said, the niche subs that I was "most active in" are just not available/big enough in any of the Lemmy instances I've found, so I end up not really commenting much here compared to on Reddit.

1

Equally. Try to get used to this and to subscribe to topics I follow.

1
lemmy.world

yeah. not sure about the open/free part, with defederation & whatnot, but it's not like those instances stopped existing (unlike with reddit where they just moved to a new subreddit).

hopefully in a few months there'll be a decent mobile client.

1

I’m on iOS and I’m using Liftoff and so far it’s a pretty solid client. I came from Apollo so I’m hoping there will be a similar client, I don’t want a straight rip off but more of a spiritual successor.

2

Depending on the circumstances. I dont like far right and far left subs, so if this lemmy's subs also become far-sides I will stick to my own lemmy.

1

Now that the reditters have come here. All the same pro-capitalism and rude behavior is here

-1