Simple question: Will you go back to Reddit and other centralized social media platforms, if Reddit step back from the API changes? The benefits of Reddit are obvisiouly, it has million of users and even small communitys have thousands of users.
For me it’s pretty clear, after deleting my Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and Discord accounts, the decentraliced Fediverse is my future in social media. Even with an very much smaller community, i’m not willing to be treated as ad-cow for the big corps.
But what do you think about your future in social media? Fediverse or Reddit, Meta, Google and all the others? Or will you go safe and use both, to have an backup option?
(Image by Alan Frijns from Pixabay)
Reddit burning its bridge with Apollo’s dev probably sealed the deal for me. Beyond handling things poorly, most of my time on Reddit was on my phone via Apollo. I highly doubt Christian ever works with Reddit again even if they did completely pull everything back.
Things have been pretty good here, I don’t see any reason not to stick around, and there isn’t anything to make me go back. I’ll probably check hockey news on Reddit occasionally, but I can’t see myself being active.
Came here to say this. If there’s no Apollo, I will not have an account with Reddit. I’ll still do Google searches with Reddit at the end, because there’s just such a wealth of information, but I won’t participate other than that.
Like most of the other people around here, I will definitely stay at Lemmy. But I will also use Reddit as long as it has viable subreddits for me, that I cannot compensate with a Lemmy alternative.
But I hope, that Lemmy will have the same impact than Mastodon had and that many cool communities will rise from this!
I will. No Apollo no Reddit. Easy as that.
If Reddit isn’t destroyed, and I don’t think it will be, I’ll likely keep using it for the main function I use it for. Using a search engine to search “technical problem I have Reddit”.
While there’s many online resources to find the answers to my technical issues, Reddit typically has the highest quality discussions on average or serves as a jumping off point to the answers at least.
But I will continue to use Lemmy for browsing and adding in my 2 cents when I feel the need. I’ve become a somewhat recent enthusiast of FOSS, Linux, and the fediverse.
I plan on staying but I’d use both if they did. I believe in the saying “competition breeds improvement” and while I know that Lemmy is essentially built to have it own sort of “competition” in the form of alternate instances, I think it would still be worth using both, along with other Reddit alternatives because they do have their sets of pros and cons. I don’t want Reddit to shut down, but I also don’t want to support a platform that very clearly doesn’t care about their users.
Unless this place becomes as dead as before the exodus again, I don’t think I’ll be spending much time on Reddit anymore. I’ve been meaning to browse less anyways as it’s often a giant waste of time. I don’t expect that to be much different here but it might be less of a waste due to the smaller scale.
I’ll still google for Reddit when I need to find some actual answers though; no way around that for now.
If your girlfriend/boyfriend hit you with a baseball bat but then said sorry didn’t realize you would leave me I wont hit you again. Would you go back?
Possibly. That said, I’m going to actively use Lemmy and try to get used to it and find new communities.
Reddit could only succeed because of their user base…which they are actively giving the finger to…
Spez also talked about a $1 monthly charge, is clearly not trustworthy, wants to add Facebook style ads and looks like a stand in from the country club from ground hog day… I think I’ll pop in for my niche sub reddits but I’m going to make a conscious effort to not feed the monster baby going forward.
Will I stay at the quieter, cooler and more positive communities rather than be addicted to the endless scrollfests of cringe and toxicity? You bet I’m staying here :)
Besides, even if they step back, odds are good that they’d just make other, less pleasing changes anyway.
If I can work out how to easily access Lemmy then I’ll stay.
I think I’ll stay here. I like the prospect of building this ting together and shaping it the way we want it. Just that they caved in this one time doesn’t mean it won’t happen in the future. I would rather invest my time and effort into something I can stand behind and agrees with my believes. I like that it’s open source and decentralised.
Main thing that needs to be addressed with Lemmy/kbin is the mobile app situation which is well…not great at the moment
Yeah, Reddit cannot be trusted anymore, even if they revert the API thing (which they don’t even acknowledge as a bad thing), their goal is to please the potential investors and not their community.
The Fediverse is refreshing, made by passion and not for profit, I like Lemmy and I will still stay here even if Reddit backtracks on their decisions.
On Android, Jerboa is pretty ok right now, and the influx of new contributors is a great thing, the development of Jerboa will be way faster now.
If reddit took a step back I will definitely use it, but the fact that you can ask a question without being flooded with bad jokes makes this platform have value for me. I’ll happily use both.
Exactly. About time reddit has some real competition. Also it’s scary how much important info you can get only on reddit, I hope we can get backups.
Yeah. Spez is still a piece of shit and my old accounts with massive gobs of post history are still banned. My “familiar reputation” that was well respected in a few car groups is long gone, and I can’t get it back via alts without running afoul of the “no ban evasion” policy, so fuck 'em. Lemmy has been working just fine for my light, casual browsing needs. Why would I go back now?
I’ve been hearing a lot about the “fediverse” and just haven’t had any motivation to bother looking into it. But here I am now.
Even if Reddit walks this decision back, the fact that a corporation is making the decisions instead of the community/content creators means that similar drama is inevitable. I can’t blame them for making a decision to try and be more profitable, but that also means I will leave and put my effort towards a network that is community-led.
At the same time, running a Lemmy instance isn’t free - I have concerns about how these instances will stay funded in the long term. I’ll also miss the niche communities that haven’t made their way over here yet, but hopefully they will!