All being said I’m kinda asking to find out too cause I was there but I did close to jack shit on reddit… Somebody told me about lemmy and it seemed interesting so I jumped in 3 months ago, but my lemmy to reddit comparison is very limited, so I asked
I posted about as much there as I do on Lemmy. For 10 years. It changed over time from when I first joined until I left with the appocolypse, but I’ve seen many forums, chat rooms and social media things do the same. It’s mostly the people that influence the content and culture, not the UI/UX the owner of the site made or changed. Generally, everything gets turned to shit once it hits enough users and the ratio of users who developed and experienced a certain culture are lower than the new users who have no frame of reference and end up shifting that culture.
This even has a name. It’s called “Eternal September.” From when college Usenet services would be flooded with new students in September that didn’t know proper etiquette and such. It was happening with Reddit before the whole API price stuff, for me, and the killing of the app I used was really just the kick in the pants needed to finally ditch it (that and there being an alternative that popped up).
Yeah, I noticed it on my subscribed subs. For me the eternal September made itself felt in 2018 but I bet it started earlier for others, depending on the subs you visit.
All being said I’m kinda asking to find out too cause I was there but I did close to jack shit on reddit… Somebody told me about lemmy and it seemed interesting so I jumped in 3 months ago, but my lemmy to reddit comparison is very limited, so I asked
I posted about as much there as I do on Lemmy. For 10 years. It changed over time from when I first joined until I left with the appocolypse, but I’ve seen many forums, chat rooms and social media things do the same. It’s mostly the people that influence the content and culture, not the UI/UX the owner of the site made or changed. Generally, everything gets turned to shit once it hits enough users and the ratio of users who developed and experienced a certain culture are lower than the new users who have no frame of reference and end up shifting that culture.
This even has a name. It’s called “Eternal September.” From when college Usenet services would be flooded with new students in September that didn’t know proper etiquette and such. It was happening with Reddit before the whole API price stuff, for me, and the killing of the app I used was really just the kick in the pants needed to finally ditch it (that and there being an alternative that popped up).
Yeah, I noticed it on my subscribed subs. For me the eternal September made itself felt in 2018 but I bet it started earlier for others, depending on the subs you visit.