I’ve been here since the great Reddit Exodus and have seen some good and some bad.

What have you liked and disliked about being on Lemmy so far?

Do you see your usage going up or down?

    • DerisionConsulting@lemmy.ca
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      9 months ago

      Or naked women.

      If there was a distinction between “this is porn” and “this contains content/language which may not be appropriate in a work environment” that could solve the problem. But getting the Fediverse to agree on where that line is, and to get everyone to comply might not be possible.

      Like I understand that some people like naked women, and I am not trying to take that away from them, but I would prefer not to see any for the rest of my life.

      • Blaze@discuss.tchncs.de
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        9 months ago

        Do you know that instance blocking is now possible at the user level? It’s in your settings, in the “block” tab. On Lemmy it’s mostly lemmynsfw.com that has that content

    • Rodeo@lemmy.ca
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      9 months ago

      Really, wow, because the amount of furry porn and femboy memes I’ve had to block on Lemmy is astounding. It’s fucking everywhere here.

    • Ace T'Ken@lemmy.caOPM
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      9 months ago

      I agree with this. I tend to browse “all” and try not to block people I disagree with and only block spammers, subs that are in another language, or that I don’t find interesting in the slightest.

      I’m not interested in making an echo chamber.

      • Numpty@lemmy.ca
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        9 months ago

        Yeah that is WAY over the top… I’m not interested in that stuff and… damn… it’s everywhere.

  • sbv@sh.itjust.works
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    9 months ago

    Needs more posts.

    I don’t see as many insightful comments as I did on Reddit, but that’s just a function of the number of comments/users.

    I like that there are enough posts to keep me entertained.

    • Ace T'Ken@lemmy.caOPM
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      9 months ago

      There’s a lot of smart people here, but I feel you’re correct. There’s no need for smart people to show themselves when everybody agrees with them or they’re afraid to give a dissenting opinion.

      • sbv@sh.itjust.works
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        9 months ago

        It feels like we’re all knowledge workers. I fit into the middle aged, D&D playing, politically left, software developing dad demographic. It feels like most of the posters here check many of the same boxes.

        • Rodeo@lemmy.ca
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          9 months ago

          As someone who is not, boy does it get annoying hearing shit like “just change jobs and you’ll get a big raise!”

            • Rodeo@lemmy.ca
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              9 months ago

              That already happened, at least where I live. I make only slightly less than an entry level dev as a tradesman at a grocery store. And all the dev jobs are in Vancouver where the cost of living is about 30% higher. But they’re not making 30% more than I am.

        • Ace T'Ken@lemmy.caOPM
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          9 months ago

          Well, you certainly have me in that list. I just feel the need to be correct for correct reasons, not just because it makes me feel morally superior. I frequently try to prove myself wrong as an exercise in keeping sharp.

    • Really insightful or just creative and well-worded variations on what people “already know”?

      The latter are very common, even here. Truly insightful comments are vanishingly rare anywhere there’s an up/down vote system.

      As an example, if I were to comment on someone’s post about the evils of the Chinese government (with the inevitable mention of Tiananmen Square in 1989) with the truth, that would be downvoted to perdition. Hell, there’s a good chance the post would be removed. I would almost certainly be branded a “tankie”. Because truth is not an issue in populism. Popularity is. And the popular opinion says hundreds to thousands of students were massacred in Tiananmen Square when in reality the truth of the matter is no students were massacred and the massacre that did happen didn’t happen in Tiananmen Square.

      You see the real massacre happened several kilometres away and was of protesting labour. The student gathering in Tiananmen Square was a sideshow to the real perceived threat the Chinese government was reacting to. A mild annoyance vs. the perceived existential threat of the nationwide labour protests that even included elements of the PLA. But bring that genuine insight, not just rewarmed and creative expressions of popular opinion, into a thread and you’ll be voted into nothingness.

      Lemmy had an opportunity to improve on Reddit. The (openly communist) developers of it decided instead to just make their own Reddit with leftist leanings and blackjack and hookers.

  • SbisasCostlyTurnover@feddit.uk
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    9 months ago

    My biggest issue with Lemmy so far is that it feels like we’ve got an awful lot of lurkers, and whilst that’s fine I do struggle with the idea that the place lacks content, whilst also having a relatively quiet userbase.

    It puts a lot of strain on a few people to bring the content. If those people don’t bring it, it can be pretty quiet, especially on the smaller communities.

    • ColonelPanic@lemm.ee
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      9 months ago

      I sort of agree, however I’d much prefer fewer, higher quality or actually helpful comments over Reddit’s abundance of absolutely useless comments from people looking to get some quick karma.

      If you remove the empty comments from a given post on Reddit I guarantee it’d look a lot more desolate.

      I mostly lurk, but if I don’t have something to say I just don’t say it, rather than throw in some random quote, reference or quip to try and get some votes.

    • umbrella@lemmy.ml
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      9 months ago

      I think that was the case on Reddit too. It was just less pronounced because of the sheer amount of people.

      The conclusion is the same though, we need more people if we want the Reddit-like experience we are used to.

      But as Reddit grew, a sort of eternal September happened where it lost the ‘magic’ and became ever more like regular crappy social media. I’m not sure how to solve this.

    • Ace T'Ken@lemmy.caOPM
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      9 months ago

      For the most part I agree, but I also have a small counterpoint. That means those of us that actually produce content have a higher chance of it being seen as well.

    • Blaze@discuss.tchncs.de
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      9 months ago

      Strong agree. Hopefully it will improve with the next wave of migration for Reddit, but indeed sometimes it is a bit overwhelming.

    • jadero@lemmy.ca
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      9 months ago

      I was never a fan of content for the sake of content or the various numbers games that get played. I wouldn’t have a clue about the actual statistics, but my perception is that postings and comments are generally higher quality than on Reddit.

  • fathog@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    There’s a lot of things here I didn’t realize Reddit had lost over the years. A big one is how comments don’t get lost in the deluge of a popular post, and the top comments aren’t low effort jokes that weren’t funny on the last 3 posts. There’s also a joy in finding new communities (like this one!), that fades once you’re adding the thousandth x-porn or meme sub.

    Although content was pretty slim at the start, over the past month or two I’ve had moments where I didn’t realize I was on Lemmy instead of Reddit or vice versa. (Reno for reddit is great, because it’s a shit app. Best way to stop going on there is to get disconnected due to multiple API requests. Shoutout Voyager for being great.)

    Reddit has also gotten significantly worse since the exodus, which is a bittersweet feeling as a former head mod whose sub got banned for joining in the protest. I miss the glory days, but I’m fucking glad it’s dying. (Dipshit admins didn’t remove me when they re-opened it, so I passed it over to someone who’s still on there.) I’m happy to see Lemmy is gaining steam.

    Negatively, I think a lot of people over here are seriously terminally online. I’ve read, bar none, some of the worst takes I’ve ever seen in comments here. (I’m not talking about my comment history, fwiw, although the dude who equated guns to cars is pretty up there.) The “hivemind” leans quite left, which I honestly like, but it does feel like there’s very little nuance for dissenting opinions. That being said, fuck nazis, and fuck reddit for allowing them to disperse their hatred under the guise of “sharing ideas”.

    Fuck me, that was a bit of an essay

    • thecrotch@sh.itjust.works
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      9 months ago

      the top comments aren’t low effort jokes that weren’t funny on the last 3 posts

      Someone quoted a Simpsons episode to make a point, let’s spend the next 20 comments quoting the rest of the episode at each other

    • Ace T'Ken@lemmy.caOPM
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      9 months ago

      Short essays are kind of what I designed this community for, so you are directly on point!

      I agree with absolutely everything you said above.

  • Thorny_Insight@lemm.ee
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    9 months ago

    I wish there was more variety in the userbase. It’s too easy to predict which kind of comments receives love and which hate.

    • Ace T'Ken@lemmy.caOPM
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      9 months ago

      For example, my veganism thread in this sub had three downvotes with under 30 seconds of me posting it.

      Some people downvote things without reading them which is one of the big things this community was designed to avoid.

      I knew that stating an opinion outside of the activist opinion would get attacked.

  • thrawn@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    I use it for quick reading material while doing other stuff and to monologue. I’m a spectator that likes to give my lengthy opinions unprompted, but otherwise open comments purely for reading material. This colors my thoughts hugely.

    I like that it’s not Reddit. Didn’t like that company. I have found Lemmy users to be a lot more willing to stand up against corporations and boycott acceptable products due to ethics— something very lacking in society now and a massive contributor to the disrespect companies treat consumers with. For enjoyers of certain niches, it has good content and good people. For me, the community is a much needed reprieve from a world that feels increasingly consumerist and accepting of evil.

    I don’t think the discussions are very high quality. They don’t contain as much useful information or corrections as Reddit, which due to user count had more relative experts. Misinformation is nearly as bad here but less insidious because Reddit misinformation was sneakier, but it’s more obnoxious so it elicits more confusion than annoyance like it did on Reddit (which is better, to be fair). Comment sections feel repetitive due to lack of unique ideas or analysis, and they usually will not delve further than knee jerk reactions to parent commenter knee jerk reactions. So much so that I strongly believe that, if Lemmy was fed into an LLM, 95% of comment sections could be more efficiently created by bots. It’s a lot less civil than most of the new internet, vitriol and bad faith arguments that never acknowledge the other commenter’s statements are common. Lemmy is wildly tribalistic with little room for disagreements, even minor. This makes for poor reading material.

    So it does remind me of the older Internet, before the forced civility and mainstream use that leads to deeper discussions. I sound critical but a lot of this is nostalgic, and I like it. While I’d love for Lemmy to improve, these flaws are familiar and some part of me is glad to see them again. Reddit was kind of feeling stale and sterile by the time I left, and I expect it’s significantly worse now (and quite possibly actually mostly bots). And the benefits, primarily the anti-consumerism, is refreshing.

    Honestly speaking, I wouldn’t say Lemmy is good and I could never suggest it to “normal” people. But I like it, and it makes for solid quick reading material, which alone offsets the negatives.

    Oh, and the questionable quality discussions here make it easier to stop reading comments and reconnect with real life. This past week I found myself actively watching the waves on a beach. Back on Reddit I used years worth of beautiful places as a backdrop for what felt like more interesting information on the app, and sometimes came off as an ass for doing so. I would never return to Reddit for that alone, and I think it’s part of why I’m okay with Lemmy staying this way.

    • Ace T'Ken@lemmy.caOPM
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      9 months ago

      You summed up a lot of my feelings quite well on why I wasn’t sad to leave Reddit.

      My personal dissatisfaction with a lot of what is going on on Lemmy is why I created this community now. Groupthink, even if it is correct, often does not understand the reasoning it is correct. They present weak arguments and straw man the opposition and frequently will even strawman undecided readers.

      I don’t know where in the last 20 years this became the de facto way to convince people that you are correct, but it isn’t.

      I ran a somewhat large forum for about 10 years from the mid-90s to the mid-2000s and we used to argue forcefully on there. If you argue even somewhat forcefully on any of these public-facing “forum replacements” now, you get absolutely shit on without anybody countering anything you said. At some point, it seems every group has just made the assumption that they are correct and will not ever discuss it.

      • thrawn@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        That’s actually pretty much the issue I have with the discussion here, I hadn’t really seen it put to words. I’ve read what should have been respectful disagreements turned into what I feel are autopilot arguments with name calling peppered in. It often feels like people are waiting to get a response so they can go in, but they don’t always read the response first. I assume it’s for the benefit of the “audience,” but it frequently strawmans them too, as you noted. Compared to a point-counterpoint setup which is more interesting and actually has a chance of convincing someone, the oddly common Lemmy discourse feels kind of pointless. Like, who is it for?

        When I first came here, I believed the talk about how the discussions were high quality so I said more. I don’t think I ever ran into the people who churn out dissatisfying arguments but I also only very rarely got good talks. That combined with the bottom-tier fights that happen with controversial subjects? I see why most people only lurk.

        On the subject of controversy though, my current guess is that most people here are so similar that any deviation on strong subjects leads to a need to crush opposition as fiercely as possible. I sometimes feel it happening to me, which is the clearest sign that I need to step back and reevaluate to make sure I’m not falling into the same vice. It’s also part of why I don’t engage in controversial discussion— there’s no real point, and I’m here to have a good time not fight people.

        • Ace T'Ken@lemmy.caOPM
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          9 months ago

          Yeah, you seem as disappointed in the way things shook out the same as I did.

          The intention for this community is to help to understand other views, not bury them. I feel that’s what makes us different. Hell, sometimes I want to make sure I’m correct on something and would like people to pick apart my view to make sure I’m logically consistent.

          Problem is, most people are not logically consistent themselves and tend to not be able to articulate their position when pushed. It used to be perfectly fine to not have a stance on something, but as the internet grew, you HAD to have a stance on everything, even if you were deeply uninformed. Now people create a stance first and just get mad and block anything contradicting it.

          • thrawn@lemmy.world
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            9 months ago

            I am somewhat disappointed, but I hope these are growing pains and that the community will improve. I don’t think Internet toxicity like I see is sustainable— who would want to only have interactions like that? It’s exhausting to read, participating must feel like a chore of unbelievable pointlessness. I can see a better Lemmy on the horizon where they get it out of their system, so to speak.

            Commenters learning how to argue would go a long way. I took years of debate and honestly feel like one semester should be a requirement. There are respectful and effective ways to argue, but Lemmy users are more prone to unconvincing attempts to bulldoze. On Reddit that led to being buried, with quality arguments on the same topic getting upvotes. Here, the quality arguments are rarer so you only see the bad faith ones.

            Still, I’m not giving up on Lemmy. I truly believe it can improve. But I can also see it driving away new users, or turning into an extremist platform like Voat. Now Lemmy is nowhere near the cesspool that Voat was so I’m optimistic.

  • /home/pineapplelover@lemm.ee
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    9 months ago

    I like that the community is pretty cool and you make a post it will probably gain good quality engagement more so than Reddit. Downside is there aren’t many people so smaller communities are pretty much stagnant and dead.

    Usage is pretty much the same, still doomscroll, respond, post.

  • jadero@lemmy.ca
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    9 months ago

    First and foremost is that it is decentralized. I don’t mean that in any technical sense where the workload is distributed and the network is resilient against the loss of nodes. I mean that it’s easy to go “instance shopping”, because the decentralization has created another level of categorization.

    Most people standing up and moderating a server seem to have a vision comparable to, but larger than that held by someone creating and moderating a community. That allows for larger collectives of like-minded people. As a result, I almost never filter by subscription, but by “local”. As a result, I often find myself participating in communities that I would never subscribe to.

    Perhaps related to that, one of the things I see on lemmy is that people are generally polite. If I’m getting downvoted for something, I usually know why. I can either infer the reason by rereading and thinking about it a bit or someone tells me in a comment. It’s not that there are no drive-by downvotes, but they’re much less common than on Reddit.

    Also, I see people getting thanked for sharing more often than on Reddit, and those thank-you notes get upvoted by more than just the direct participants. And when the beneficiary responds in kind (“thanks for reading”) that also garners upvotes from more than just the direct participants.

    Discussions don’t seem to devolve to fighting as often. When they do, they seem to be less abusive and peter out quicker.

    That’s the positive. On the negative side, I find that it’s more common to see upvotes without continued discussion. I learn so much by bouncing ideas around and having people ask for clarification, provide counterpoints, provide examples or counterexamples, etc. I occasionally get frustrated that an opinion in its infancy just seems to disappear into the ether, trailing a voting history behind it.

    • Ace T'Ken@lemmy.caOPM
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      9 months ago

      I agree with the majority of this. Maybe it’s just because I tend to play Devil’s Advocate on some very broken logic that other people have, but I see a lot more downvotes per view here than I did on Reddit.

      • jadero@lemmy.ca
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        9 months ago

        I can’t disagree. It’s not like I did any kind of analysis, just an impression I got.

  • fubarx@lemmy.ml
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    9 months ago

    Voyager is close enough to Apollo, so happy on the UI side.

    Miss having MLB game live threads that made watching along and commenting with strangers fun.

  • ImplyingImplications@lemmy.ca
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    9 months ago

    I like the small community vibe. I’ve read some arguments that the negative effects associated with social media might come from the fact that it caters to everyone.

    The idea is that normally businesses wouldn’t try to sit a whole bunch of hunters next to a whole bunch of vegans, but social media companies do just that. In fact, the heated arguments between these groups drives engagement, which means their algorithms are incentivized to make opposing groups angry at each other.

    There are no algorithms driving engagement on Lemmy. There is no incentive for instance owners to gain as many users as possible. Lemmy is more of a small forum that links to other small forums, which is actually what the internet looked like before search engines and social media existed.

    • Ace T'Ken@lemmy.caOPM
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      9 months ago

      I am very much a fan of not being at the whims of “the algorithm”.

      Every single time I am forced to go on to Facebook by some family thing I’m reminded why I never want to go back to Facebook.

  • joelimgu@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    For me is the lack of recommendations and the usability to discover new communities organically as in reddit.

  • FenrirIII@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    Using Boost and still learning. What gets me most is seeing the same post linked a dozen times because each instance has its own news group.

    • Ace T'Ken@lemmy.caOPM
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      9 months ago

      That is something I would really, really like to see implemented; Lemmy needs some kind of aggregator feature.

  • EmergMemeHologram@startrek.website
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    9 months ago

    I’m finding the politics incredible grating.

    You find a post on All, then realize after commenting on an article or meme that you’ve wandered on to a political instance, wherein you not believing in some niche black and white viewpoint wholeheartedly results in getting shat on.

    I like the memes and commenting on articles, but I’m exhausted by all the politics everywhere all the time.

    I like most everything else, federation is actually pretty good, the server admins do a great job keeping things running, and the 3P apps are getting really solid (the android obes are awesome).

    • Ace T'Ken@lemmy.caOPM
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      9 months ago

      Yeah, I totally agree. I can’t promise that this community won’t talk about politics at some point because it’s pretty much inevitable for something based on discussion.

      What I can promise is that I do not ban or moderate opposing viewpoints, and have built into the rules that people with different views are not to be downvotee and shunned.

      But then again look at the other threads in here that I’ve created. People from outside the community pop in, read the title, realize it doesn’t agree with them, and then dowvote it all within 30 seconds.

      Well… I’m trying is all I can say.

  • JackLSauce@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    I’ll skip repeating what others have already said but add the default UI needs to be less cramped on desktop. Not sure about mobile as I’ve had a mostly positive experience on Sync (thanks to competition from a selection of 3rd party apps btw but I digress)

  • ddrcrono@lemmy.caM
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    9 months ago

    Well they haven’t been asking me to use the app every three seconds so there’s something.

    • Ace T'Ken@lemmy.caOPM
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      9 months ago

      But just think of the poor corporation trying to get their IPO out there! Just display all the ads and give them your information, they tell me it’s better that way somehow.