• Kichae@lemmy.ca
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      8 months ago

      The lessons from Twitter are clear: most people will not leave bad social media without a better replacement. They’re attached to their history, and attached to their routine. It getting worse does not change that.

      Mastodon didn’t scratch the Twitter users’ itches, and it doesn’t look like Lemmy will scratch Reddit users’. These aren[t the people that populated the Internet 20 years ago.

      They’re the people who never would have touched it, because it was too technical, had too high a barrier of entry, and saw it as niche.

      It’s time to stop focusing on whether Reddit succeeds or fails. They’re not going to fail. Instead, it’s time to make an internet of niches again, for ourselves, without the Twitter and Reddit users.

      • thejml@lemm.ee
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        8 months ago

        I think it’s important to say that while history and routine are part of it, social networks are only as useful as they are populated. If your friends and people you follow are all on Twitter, you’re not going to jump to Mastodon. If the content creators start switching, people will likely follow… but they won’t switch unless their followers switch.

        I switched to Mastodon when Twitter went to X, and cold Turkey dropped to Lemmy from Reddit when the API scandal hit and the only thing I miss is most of the reason I was in those platforms in the first place, the content creators.

        • Troy@lemmy.ca
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          8 months ago

          I still go to Reddit for some communities that don’t have critical mass on Lemmy. Sure you can talk about programming or Linux here, but the more niche ones (like specific mods for specific games) are entirely absent.

          But when I want to post something or create content, it goes here.

      • RBG@discuss.tchncs.de
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        8 months ago

        You don’t need a better replacement. People just need something that keeps them in the app longer, these sort of “dark patterns” that are often mentioned. The app can be total shit, as long as it manages to engage users. That’s why something like Lemmy or Mastodon is not succeeding with the general population because they explicitly have been made not to utilise such things.

        • Kichae@lemmy.ca
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          8 months ago

          By “better”, I don’t necessarily mean of higher quality. Those dark patterns are often features from the point of view of the average user. Without them, they can feel lost, and they spurned their platforms of choice until they had them.

      • Gaywallet (they/it)@beehaw.org
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        8 months ago

        They’re the people who never would have touched it, because it was too technical, had too high a barrier of entry, and saw it as niche.

        Yup, if anyone wants to “replace” these platforms, they need to make them very approachable to tech naive individuals. Most people have close to no technical skills, and nearly everyone on federated software seems to fail to recognize this.

        Ultimately I am in agreement that we shouldn’t be trying to drop a replacement to these platforms directly in. We should be offering an alternative, something fundamentally different, because those platforms have failed to fulfill our desires and needs from social media on the internet.

  • flatbield@beehaw.org
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    8 months ago

    I was on Reddit the other day asking a tax question. Seemed like posting was less. Felt like a ghost town in some subreddits. Just my impression. Had not been there for maybe 6 months. Place seemed different.

    I wonder if traffic and posting is really down?

    Edit: Read the article. Says maybe stable maybe some growth. Says search driven traffic less fractionally. I know I see fewer search links to Reddit on DDG when I search.

    Edit: Article was a bit vague about stock of new content. Are big contributors adding important new content? Not even sure how to measure. Reddit seems to like to focus on page views and time on site, maybe because financially that is all that matters? Maybe they do not really care about good content and content generation so much?

    • mibo80@lemm.ee
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      8 months ago

      I visit daily for a few of the top stories on r/all and some subreddits like, r/Helldivers, but overall my interest in anything else on that site has soured. It’s not nearly as engaging as it was and the subs that get pushed are just terrible copies of what was great. It’s definitely died before but this is different.

      • flatbield@beehaw.org
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        8 months ago

        I liked how the article tried to paint less fractional users from search as a positive. Too me that sounds like less relevance which is negative. Also interesting that Reddit no longer publishes that statistic. Makes a me wonder why.

        Edit: Also in line with my experience. Feels like I see less search links and when I see them, I am less likely to click on them.