They took over the vegan circlejerk subreddit after I left reddit and don’t know them, they run a mastodon server that I don’t really understand and seem to be using bots to bridge reddit posts. My instance is bot free.
I see now that all the posts from “Lemmy.VG for Vegans” (@bridge) are reposts from reddit.com/r/vegancirclejerk - that’s a pretty risky strategy. Most of the posts on Reddit appear to be satirical attacks on veganism, but decontextualized from their original post username and the post history of that account, it’s less easy to independently discern which are ironic ragebait and which might be sincere.
We’re experimenting with the use of bots on SLRPNK, but mirroring Reddit content is not a use that we consider wise for a number of reasons.
Yeah I don’t think it’s a good idea either. Can’t have a circlejerk without the original. Overall I don’t think Lemmy is a replacement for reddit, it’s something different and better so I’m not looking to rehash any reddit ideas or memes.
Bigger picture for me is I ran and grew that meme community since 2018 and am tired of it. I think it is effective at what it does which is targeting vegetarians and literally hundreds of people have thanked me at the time for helping them cross the bridge to veganism, but it was a different time and different place. I also don’t think the few thousand people on Lemmy are a big enough group for that. Without the comments, users and community it’s just spam.
I joined Reddit because of the thoughtful discussions, and because it was well moderated, site:reddit.com became an extremely useful search term to find answers to difficult questions. I didn’t have much appetite for meme communities and ironic shitposting. It is frustrating to try and discuss the nuance of an article with a pool of people who comment with their knee-jerk reactions to the article title but aren’t interested in the actual content.
My thinking has since shifted since I started studying patterns for good community-building as a Fediverse admin. It can take significant parts of an hour to engage with long-form content like an investigative report or video essay, and that severely limits who can participate constructively in the comments section. Meanwhile a meme takes seconds to digest, which is more typical of available leisure time. A post on !documentaries or !infrapolitics is lucky to get a dozen votes and any engagement, while it is unusual for !memes posts to get fewer than 100 votes.
I’m still garbage at finding good memes or making my own, but I’ve come to respect that while a lot of the discussion they provoke isn’t particularly constructive, the sheer volume of the response and the mechanisms of moderation and vote filtering mean some surprisingly insightful discussions can arise in ‘low-effort’ post comments. And people who engage with meme content often experience it as a gateway to more serious communities on the server.
While the traffic to a meme community can spill over to your other discussions and draw additional attention to your server, I don’t suggest creating one if you no longer have the appetite for that kind of content. Meme communities require at least as much moderation as more serious communities, and are more likely to attract trolls and bad actors. But If you can find people interested in creating and maintaining them based on your server’s ground rules, I don’t think it’s a bad idea to include those kinds of communities on your server.
Oh yeah; I see the benefits of meme communities, but it takes a lot of work running a vegan one. During that time, I was exposed to a lot of material that I don’t wish to be any more including some really insane things like people hurting small animals on video and sending it to me. Big picture for me and vegantheoryclub.org is that I’m in my 40s and I’m looking for similar people in a similar place to bullshit with and post cooking and mutual aid online. I’m not really trawling for vegan converts. While obviously conversion and convincing are important as vegans since we are a huge minority with a moral philosophy the biggest challenge as I see it is recidivism. People fail at veganism because once they make the jump, they have nowhere else to go or to talk to, so I hope this small lemmy server for the population it ends up attracting can help them with that. I don’t see it as a tool for drawing engagement or mass numbers like the lemmy.vg person wants to do, and I definitely am done dealing with these fucking assholes who troll vegan forums who after removing their posts taunt you for weeks because they are miserable losers with no one to talk to and no social skills. To be honest I hate them.
I don’t think using a bot to copy memes is a valuable service at all. It becomes completely divorced from its context.
I like the effort you’ve put into customizing your UI.
I see you’ve been around for a couple of months longer too. Do you have a relationship with nume@lemmy.vg or have you never interacted?
They took over the vegan circlejerk subreddit after I left reddit and don’t know them, they run a mastodon server that I don’t really understand and seem to be using bots to bridge reddit posts. My instance is bot free.
I see now that all the posts from “Lemmy.VG for Vegans” (@bridge) are reposts from reddit.com/r/vegancirclejerk - that’s a pretty risky strategy. Most of the posts on Reddit appear to be satirical attacks on veganism, but decontextualized from their original post username and the post history of that account, it’s less easy to independently discern which are ironic ragebait and which might be sincere.
We’re experimenting with the use of bots on SLRPNK, but mirroring Reddit content is not a use that we consider wise for a number of reasons.
Yeah I don’t think it’s a good idea either. Can’t have a circlejerk without the original. Overall I don’t think Lemmy is a replacement for reddit, it’s something different and better so I’m not looking to rehash any reddit ideas or memes.
Bigger picture for me is I ran and grew that meme community since 2018 and am tired of it. I think it is effective at what it does which is targeting vegetarians and literally hundreds of people have thanked me at the time for helping them cross the bridge to veganism, but it was a different time and different place. I also don’t think the few thousand people on Lemmy are a big enough group for that. Without the comments, users and community it’s just spam.
I joined Reddit because of the thoughtful discussions, and because it was well moderated, site:reddit.com became an extremely useful search term to find answers to difficult questions. I didn’t have much appetite for meme communities and ironic shitposting. It is frustrating to try and discuss the nuance of an article with a pool of people who comment with their knee-jerk reactions to the article title but aren’t interested in the actual content.
My thinking has since shifted since I started studying patterns for good community-building as a Fediverse admin. It can take significant parts of an hour to engage with long-form content like an investigative report or video essay, and that severely limits who can participate constructively in the comments section. Meanwhile a meme takes seconds to digest, which is more typical of available leisure time. A post on !documentaries or !infrapolitics is lucky to get a dozen votes and any engagement, while it is unusual for !memes posts to get fewer than 100 votes.
I’m still garbage at finding good memes or making my own, but I’ve come to respect that while a lot of the discussion they provoke isn’t particularly constructive, the sheer volume of the response and the mechanisms of moderation and vote filtering mean some surprisingly insightful discussions can arise in ‘low-effort’ post comments. And people who engage with meme content often experience it as a gateway to more serious communities on the server.
While the traffic to a meme community can spill over to your other discussions and draw additional attention to your server, I don’t suggest creating one if you no longer have the appetite for that kind of content. Meme communities require at least as much moderation as more serious communities, and are more likely to attract trolls and bad actors. But If you can find people interested in creating and maintaining them based on your server’s ground rules, I don’t think it’s a bad idea to include those kinds of communities on your server.
Oh yeah; I see the benefits of meme communities, but it takes a lot of work running a vegan one. During that time, I was exposed to a lot of material that I don’t wish to be any more including some really insane things like people hurting small animals on video and sending it to me. Big picture for me and vegantheoryclub.org is that I’m in my 40s and I’m looking for similar people in a similar place to bullshit with and post cooking and mutual aid online. I’m not really trawling for vegan converts. While obviously conversion and convincing are important as vegans since we are a huge minority with a moral philosophy the biggest challenge as I see it is recidivism. People fail at veganism because once they make the jump, they have nowhere else to go or to talk to, so I hope this small lemmy server for the population it ends up attracting can help them with that. I don’t see it as a tool for drawing engagement or mass numbers like the lemmy.vg person wants to do, and I definitely am done dealing with these fucking assholes who troll vegan forums who after removing their posts taunt you for weeks because they are miserable losers with no one to talk to and no social skills. To be honest I hate them.
I don’t think using a bot to copy memes is a valuable service at all. It becomes completely divorced from its context.