This is a rant post and I apologize but I had to talk about this. Most subs are coming back online and not saying ANYTHING about the next steps. Only a handful of subs are going indefinite. I checked the front page for the first time today after leaving the a couple hours before the day of the blackout and what do I see? Subs are up, and comments and upvotes are up to the general average before the blackout.
I checked r/gaming to see their recent post (WHICH HAS OVER 68k UPVOTES), and I see a comment with over 500 upvotes saying in a nutshell, “You guys need to calm down, they’re a company and need to make money”.
Along with a couple other comments saying similar things. Are you fucking serious? You can’t even have the fucking balls to say, “This is a company that has consistently screwed over its users and I need to take a stand and quit my addiction”? You’re just gonna sit and do nothing? Fuck you. You’re no fucking better than u/spez. You’re all a bunch of fucking hypocritical liars for shitting on spez and the admins while talking about how you’re “done” with Reddit and you won’t support this.
Go touch grass you fucking addicted cowards. I’m glad I made the switch to Lemmy if it means I don’t have to interact with dumbfucks like you.
that’s exactly the type of person I’m trying to avoid by using reddit alternatives, let him stay over there
I’m honestly hoping the fediverse DOESN’T get as big as reddit because the quality of submissions and discussion will suffer
As someone with a 14 year old reddit account I forgot how much better it was before it became mainstream.
It’s why I’m fine with lemmy growing organically.
There are pros and cons to both really. Smaller communities offer better content and discussions, but larger user bases provide more content. My account was 12 years, so I feel where you’re coming from for sure, but modern reddit has SO MUCH content compared to 10+ years ago.
But it was still enjoyable, useful, and arguably even more dynamic back then. The signal to noise ratio was much much better then. More content isn’t necessarily a benefit.