Reddit's downfall is a major disruption in the internet, of course everyone is going to talk about it, especially considering most of us are coming from there. Chill, bro!
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Arguably one of the most important sites too. People had accounts for week over a decade, they're rightly pissed when a place you used to love turns to shit because some dropkick CEO wants to pump his upcoming IPO
Yup. It was very different back around 2011 when I made my account.
It was a hard first month not going there but Iβm pretty over it now.
Furthermore we want to make Lemmy better and that includes learning from reddit - what should be the same, what should be changed and what should be added/removed/be like reddit "used to be" etc. It's a software project not a summer flirt.
"I am going to create a discussion about a thing I would like people to stop discussing"
It's like saying "smoking should be forbidden" and the lighting a cigarette.
Except OP is starting a meta discussion about Reddit discussions, not a direct discussion about Reddit. I don't necessarily agree with OP, but you've crafted an artificial contradiction using a false equivalence. I'd be happier if we left the Reddit-tier logic back where it belongs.
Fine, I'll stop talking about 9gag. Sheesh.
Do you remember, when even once 9gag was actually a good platform and not destroyed by money? Pepperidge farm remembers.
9gag was never a good platform, it's where memes went to die.
I sincerely wish people would use the block feature, rather than keep making threads complaining about content/communities they don't like to see.
Sincere question, how do I use the block feature, I mean, can we filter out certain words? I only know of blocking of users.
On kbin and I think most major lemmy instances, you can block communities, so if you don't want to see content from them, say redditmigration posts, you can filter the whole community. That won't stop you from say seeing it in unrelated communities, in which case blocking the users who keep bring it up reduces visibility of the topic even more. Finally setting your default page to your subs rather than top reduces the visibility of unwanted topics even more.
I don't mind it. In fact as a person who spent countless hours at Reddit over the past 6+ years I'm very much interested on what's going on there despite the fact that I'm no longer using the platform.
I think it's important while creating a new community to examine what the previous one did poorly so that we can do better.
This is the first post Iβve seen in a while about it. Thanks for bringing it up so people will discuss it.
Jk nice try spez, go home.
...No? It's relevant news.
Seems like it'd be more odd if there wasn't news about it.
Youβre talking about it right now!
Removing per rule #4.
How are you going to get people to stop talking about a major site failing? Lmao
Nothing more Reddit than complaining about Reddit
It took a year or so before the discussion of Digg stopped happening on Reddit. Itβs already calmed way down from peak API but they keep on making horrible decisions.
Yeah exactly ppl need to start standing lemmy up on its own. Let Lemmy grow into something new and exciting. I kinda feel it's just growing pains of a new site. And it's going to take years for it to grow into it own.
Those who ignore history are doomed to repeat it. If reddit had issues, it makes sense to discuss to ensure they don't occur again
I'm okay with talking about that site to spread awareness.
What I'm not okay with is sharing direct links to it and, therefore, make traffic for it. Please use some aggregators and mirrors
When I joined mastodon, all the talk was about βthe bird site.β It fades over a few weeks.
hey guys stop talking about the thing that i just made a post about but wonβt name and therefore is not about that thing that iβm complaining about.
if you want to see better content, create it. youβre making it worse by posting about it yourself.
It gets to be a lot, but you can just filter out the obviously Reddit-centered communities/mags/whatever a lot of the time.
I don't mind those posts. But I am on the other hand slowly getting bothered by your kind of posts. They seem to be posted more often than any other reddit related news/shittalking.
DAE hate old site????? xDDDdD
Just ignore it or block it and move on. No need for the same post everyday.
I appreciate your point, however - if you wish for this series of communities to succeed, it needs to be welcoming to newcomers. And one of the ways of doing that is allowing for a continuation of conversations that were on the source communities - including, "Oh, we're getting out", "Why it's so bad", "Where do we go to", "How do we make the new community look/feel like I'm used to", etc. etc.
I'm happy to see this because it means that a corrupt and non-people-focussed environment is losing members. Like anything, it will pass, but please don't push people away by making them feel unwelcome.
What other site? We had a migration?
Reddit is like the 8th largest site on the internet, itβs a big deal that itβs dying