Skip Navigation
37 comments
  • Power tripping staff, thats it. Its getting closer and closer to fascism. Karma farming and echo-chambering.

  • I'm fully onboard with all the critique listed here, but I'm afraid I do still use R on a daily basis. Why? Because of sheer (and original / non-bot) traffic, I guess.

    This tends to mean that highly-useful, knowledgeable, expert-level commentary is still produced there in significant quantities, even if it does mean sifting hard through the dreck to find it. And that stuff can be hugely useful to me.

    That said, I feel like Lemmy has a significantly higher signal-to-noise ratio, so it doesn't have to be remotely as big as R in order to achieve the same level of usefulness, and indeed, L is certainly useful right here and right now.

    But I guess the other thing is that most of the smaller and niche communities here could really use a membership boost. Maybe with the next reddit screw-up, that will happen, hehe.

  • Censorship — So many subs have extremely odd restrictions on posts and comments; special rules to be able to comment; a list of words or phrases that shadow-remove your comments, etc. This sometimes doesn't matter with day-to-day stuff. It inhibits the capacity to explore controversial topics or have hard conversations. "Can't meta-refer to another thread or sub," "We want good content, but don't post lengthy sourced write-ups!," You find after dissecting why your comment was shadow-removed that "genocide" or "apartheid" trigger removal. No Ellipsis use on one sub, lol. I have a list of censored words by sub. Can't explore tough issues without legitimate adherence to free speech. It's one thing not to enable bigotry and incivility, but we need to be comfortable with being uncomfortable sometimes in order to yield breakthrough progress across echo-chambers.

    Power-tripping mods — It has become worse in recent years. Subs that used to have respectable mods and a true appeals process just comes down to them blindly reaffirming whatever judgement there is absent of reason or ethics. Ultimately they aren't arbiters of civil discourse but more often than not blatantly attempt to shape discourse relative to their own agenda; r/news and r/worldnews are notorious for this, particularly.

    Blocking — The hit-and-run of users throwing out weak arguments then running away by blocking is itself disappointing; but that when a user blocks it nukes the rest of the thread, disallowing you to respond to anyone else who independently replies to you makes ZERO sense.

    (Bonus: bots, but that's a given).

    In the end I'll go wherever the people are. I'll use reddit, lemmy, and I'm hopeful that the new old Digg returning with Kevin Rose and Ohanian will work out.

  • The worst thing is ppl talking about it on lemmy, teeheehee.
    But fr, I left 2 yrs ago, still will use it if a search brings me there, but dont really log-on, and haven't scrolled it 2 yrs.
    Kinda weird how popular it is now too.

37 comments