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21 comments
  • Kind of surprising given how much r/RedditAlternatives is biased towards people who didn't find any alternative because they're excessively picky and/or create problems out of thin air.

    Regarding the smaller userbase: ...seriously, nobody will find a Reddit alternative. It's stuff that we need to build.

    [I would contribute but Reddit shadowbanned my account so...]

  • I'm surprised it hasn't been removed by the r/redditAlternatives mod. Good!

    It simply doesn't have the userbase (ie the people aren't there, they're all here...) and there's censorship and shenanigans even with the "Fediverse" model. Basically, the worst of all worlds, combined. At least with Reddit, all the peeps are here.

    You can't wait for a sudden "grow" out of the blue, without actually putting effort into it. Be the change you want to see

    • The admins are usually the ones removing

      Plus that's literally what the sub is for. There's been people promoting lemmy there for years

      • My bad. I thought since they removed rimu's post and the community seems to think negatively of us (from what i've seen.)

    • m surprised it hasn’t been removed by the r/redditAlternatives mod.

      Again, I've never seen any of my posts similar to the one removed

  • Just read the discussion quickly. That's nice to see people discussing it.

    Imho, telling people they're wrong, or that they don't get it (even if that was true) when they are complaining about this or that on Lemmy won't help them change their mind about Lemmy.

    I mean, beside a few trolls that just want to drop their poop every chance they get, when someone says they have an issue using Lemmy it's... because there is indeed something that is annoying them. If not blindingly agree with them at least we should acknowledge they're having an issue. Some of them being quite obvious.

    The servers/instances selection step when creating an account is an important one, imho. Maybe we should try to think of a simplified/illustrative explanation that would help new users overcome that confusing part?

    Pretty sure that once they start using Lemmy, most will get their own bearings but for that to happen they need to start using it, and for that they need to create an account on one instance among many, and then be able to find and subscribe to a few communities on any instance. I don't think they need to be told they're wrong, or that they don't understand (or they have shitty taste and preferences) ;)

21 comments