this post was submitted on 12 Jun 2023
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Technology
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I quite like it so far, though the users of the communities I've been moderating are not necessarily the most tech savvy and may not find their way here, despite instructions and plenty of prior announcements.
So ultimately I feel like throwing 1.5M people to the wolves (though some other mods might stick around, who knows).
On the other hand, I might also have outgrown some of my communities, and just stuck around due to the familiarity. Joined reddit in my mid 20s, now I'm pushing 40.
Curious what you mod, if you don't mind telling.
/r/childfree is the biggest one, then there's /r/askagerman, /r/china and /r/bali. All of them have a new home on lemmy theoretically (https://lemmy.world/c/childfree, https://feddit.de/c/germany [merging /r/germany and /r/askagerman], https://latte.isnot.coffee/c/china and https://latte.isnot.coffee/c/bali), but we'll have to see how the acceptance rates are. /c/china seems to be the most adaptable; which is unsurprising given that people are used to dodging censorship.
The smaller subs I mod (/r/animalaww, /r/expatfinance and some others) won't even attempt to make their way over.
I've started https://latte.isnot.coffee/c/coffee though, simply because there wasn't any other one around (and to honor our instance), and at least there seems to be some initial growth, so who knows what's gonna happen.
Thanks for indulging my curiosity. Seems like an interesting mix. I'm sure adoption rates will be slower for non-techy interests, but Reddit had a slow adoption for those types of things too.
Well, I'm a childfree German living in China who visits Bali once a year. Over time I got modded in each place as a heavy user, so the mix happened organically :-)