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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 12th, 2023

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  • Don’t really know what the “best” experience was. I can’t say there was anything life changing for me. It was nice to have access to so much stuff in a very well designed app (Apollo) that let me share that content super easily with friends and family via Whatsapp or Telegram.

    Worst interactions? There were many…the groupthink can be real bad. There are a lot of people who take karma very seriously. There was one sub, dedicated to a podcast, and it was clear there was a person that had six or seven alts because of the language they used and the debate style, and they would get so upset and downvote any disagreeing comment. Other subs had plenty of trolling, transphobia, shitty moderators, etc. Other subs became basically unusable because of how large they got and how many people posted “hey, look at me!” low effort content. You know, “art I did of X character” with 2,600 upvotes for what was a 10th grader type drawing done on a notebook. That kind of kills the visibility of posts with the potential for deeper or more meaningful conversation that don’t get as many upvotes.

    In the end I think the main issue with Reddit is that it got too big. It attracted too many people on a superficial level, too many trolls, and most subs worth visiting at this point are dedicated to niche subjects and have smallish communities.




  • Saitama@lemmy.fmhy.mltoAsklemmy@lemmy.mlnull
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    1 year ago

    Good question and I think it should depend on the community. Off the top of my head, I can think of a small sub that had a very active group of “For” people and a smaller number of “Against” people. So the larger group downvoted everything that the other group posted, and upvoted themselves, eventually turning it into an echo chamber.

    Of course that’s also a result of poor modding. The mods were part of the “For” group.


  • I’ve been fairly active both on Squabbles and here. I think Squabbles looks pretty nice and it’s easy to use. I can see myself using it at work to keep up with news, light banter, etc. precisely because of the lack of NSFW, or sharing content from there with my parents or teenage kids without worrying that they may land somewhere that’s going to make them think I’m a degenerate.


  • MIle wide but inch deep is a good descriptor of a lot of subs these days. For instance, Formula 1. 10-12 years ago when it was more of a niche community you had hardcore fans there with a rich knowledge of the history of the sport. As it grew in popularity the quality of the content decreased. These days there are threads reposting fashion photos of the drivers with hundreds or thousands of upvotes and comments, which ultimately don’t mean anything. I can think of other subs where posters started sharing their fan art or creations and eventually everybody was doing it instead of having intelligent conversations.


  • I’m going to do my part to help Reddit become irrelevant. There’s only two or three subreddits that I care about, and I never really participate there, it’s more to get memes and news from my country. I’m planning to delete my 12 year old account with thousands of posts and just lurk in those subs and steal the content once or twice a week.


  • There’s a lot of people that are desperate for attention and validation and the karma system becomes really addictive to them.

    I had a lot of contentious exchanges with one person, supposedly a lady, that had to insert herself in every conversation in the sub, screech wildly about anything that went against her progressive ideas, even if it was inoffensive, instigate dumb debates and then accuse people of creating strawmen or sealioning, and somehow found a way to pretend to be a victim every single time. If a post mentioned the holocaust - her husband’s father is a holocaust survivor. If someone mentioned sexual abuse, she was a victim of rape. If there was a mention of a kidnapping, she was kidnapped at 16. If someone discussed a murder, her best friend was brutally murdered before her eyes, etc. It got ridiculous when some medical subject came up and then apparently she’s a doctor with 20 years of experience in exactly that subject and who teaches on that subject at a prestigious medical school. I have no idea how such a doctor can spend 20 hours a day on reddit and get 120k posts in a few years, but maybe that’s just me. And I’m pretty sure she had several alts because her comments would be immediately upvoted and any dissenting viewpoint downvoted to oblivion. A few of the posters also had the exact same writing style and used the same arguments, which of course they justified as “great minds think alike” and “that’s because you’re wrong, bigot”. If she was ever genuinely downvoted, she’d immediately complain.

    It really sucked the life out of the sub. And there are tons of people just like her on many subs.