this post was submitted on 26 Jun 2023
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Technology

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A video about the effectiveness of the Reddit protest

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[–] [email protected] 9 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I would have probably landed somewhere besides reddit. I considered and tried 3 different options, (Lemmy being the third) and stayed here because I was very pleased by the beehaw community. And it's very similar to reddit, which made the transition easier.

I'm doing my best to ditch reddit, and haven't used it since they announced the API pricing

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Same! I have no problem with the smaller lemmy community. It will grow over time. Each person who comments or posts here is helping it to become a better place.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago

Yep, best thing you can do it post and comment. The 90:10 rule of lurkers to content creators likely applies. But critical mass requires the lurkers to stick around -- because some percentage of them will eventually turn into content creators. When someone from Reddit checks out Lemmy for the first time, they're going to evaluate based on volume of content and discussion. If the equivalents of their favourite subs are all ghost towns, they'll just leave back for reddit. So the ratio needs to be higher to get the ball rolling.

I'm taking my own advice. On Reddit, I was fairly active. 11 year account, moderated one largish sub, 17k post karma, 200k comment karma. I still moderate that sub, because the community is important. But I've got a stickied post pointing to the equivalent on Lemmy.

But it's super quiet in there, by comparison, and I cannot be the sole source of content in a community, or it just becomes me shouting down the void. This same pattern is likely repeating across the fediverse.

But there's hope. Yesterday, two of the communities I've been trying to seed got their first external posts. [email protected] and [email protected].