Not necessarily a bad thing. A lot of new users to the fediverse.

    • [email protected]
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      783 months ago

      It’s incredibly active. It’s not gigagigant size, like masto, but it has a userbase large enough to survive for many years without an infusion. Reddit is still censoring lemmy sites, in case anyone else is curious

      • @[email protected]
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        3 months ago

        People forget web forums were way smaller than lemmy and ran just fine and were very active. Lemmy has a very different use case to mastodon. Since you don’t need individuals to latch onto. We are having a discussion on lemmy as equals around a topic not followers of a person like how a Micoblog is designed to be.

        • @[email protected]
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          33 months ago

          Even many regional message boards or forums we’re very active. Boards.ie in Ireland was the nerds internet forum. A fediverse before there was one. It was the go to for info about anything tech related or internet culture. Whirlpool in Australia is still the go to for info about internet and broadband, and is still active, if much reduced.

      • @[email protected]
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        293 months ago

        Reddit is still censoring lemmy sites, in case anyone else is curious

        Wow, really? That is hilarious

      • @[email protected]
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        133 months ago

        The front page of Reddit was the same 10 usernames for majority of the sites existence. I wouldnt be surprised if it was still the same users just using multiple accounts because so many people blocked their mains.

      • @[email protected]
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        173 months ago

        A thousand different people and you all recognise them by name? Sounds like a great community!

      • NaibofTabr
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        483 months ago

        eh, reddit was like that for like the first 10 years

          • @[email protected]
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            153 months ago

            Hopefully in 10 years, the moderation tools will be good enough to deal with a scaling userbase. What the fediverse needs is moderation subscriptions i.e subscribing to or unsubscribing from moderation actions of different groups or people.

            For example, joining a community would subscribe you automatically to the moderation list of that community, but you could also unsub from the list if you don’t like the mods there and sub to a group of people you trust more with mod decisions. Imagine if there’s an overeager mod in the community you subbed to and you wanted to exclude the modding decisions - mod lists would allow that.

            Anti Commercial-AI license

            • @[email protected]
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              3 months ago

              The issue to that is some moderation is mandatory by law, e.g. CP, copyrighted works. So mods still have to have the ability to remove data from the instances server completely, not just hide it. And instances probably also want to be able to have enforced rules on top of that.

              I think what could do better is federating on communities level. So if you post or comment to memes community, it can post or comment to version of the community on multiple instances, each with different moderators.

              • @[email protected]
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                13 months ago

                You make a good point about legal moderation. Modlists could work on top of that.

                “serverless” communities have been suggested multiple times and hopefully they will be implemented someday. It is a good idea.

                Anti Commercial-AI license

      • @[email protected]
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        143 months ago

        A part of this might be shared interes. The same people visit the same spaces.

        See it as an opportunity to build tighter communities and friendships.

    • @[email protected]
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      223 months ago

      Its wild to me how active lemmy feels compared to mastodon. I told my normie friends about it when I found out about it during the migration and they insisted that it would die and recently I was able to update them and say its still going strong and its got its own unique vibe that feels different from reddit.

      • @[email protected]
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        3 months ago

        It’s because you can actually have discussions on Lemmy, whereas microblogging like mastodon is just “old man shouts at cloud” multiplied by 2 million people. I never understood the appeal.

        • mosiacmango
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          43 months ago

          Not getting this experience on Mastodon. I hopped on after Lemmy, but so far I’ve had several positive back and forths with people.

    • pruwyben
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      3 months ago

      This is looking at total users, but I think monthly active users would be a better stat to use here. Lemmy has about 3 times the MAU of Misskey.

      Edit: Also worth noting that Pixelfed has close to 3 times Lemmy’s MAU now.

    • @[email protected]
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      43 months ago

      I’m not sure how this is measured, but from what I’ve seen by using mastodon a bit, they have a lot of bots that repost content from other sources, so in that way it feels a lot less active.