I'm astounded that people use it for anything other than this. I have received some decently fast customer service via twitter. However one glance at the content and I got tf out.
I agree. I think that's going to be the only way this shit works. I want it to work, but there needs to be more of a plan and effort than shitty memes from 2010. Everyone keeps saying "this isn't reddit this isn't reddit", we'll then why is the best content here on subreddit clone communities with the same banners and same rules? This needs to be more like Reddit, because that is only reason all of us are here.
I know I haven't yet managed to get lemmy to provide me the fix I was getting from reddit, yet.
I feel the same. The content is absolutely limited right now. I've been switching back and forth for a few days, and the content is just better over on Reddit. Even if a lot of it is reposts, it's still quality content that will draw in fresh eyes. I get in here and scroll through all filtered by hot, and very few posts are drawing me in.
I worry about lemmy not giving people enough of what reddit provides and people driftng back.
I know it isn't. Which is pretty much the reason for my question. If there isn't a constamt stream of quality content, people will just stop coming here.
Maybe. I'm finding the Lemmy content and platform features lacking personally. Some of my favorite subs don't have an analogue here, and the clones here are significantly smaller and therefore have less content. I see great potential though, which is why I think "stealing" content is a sound strategy to grow. I find it interesting also, because there are two reasons people use Reddit: The content and the platform. One of those things isn't actually owned by Reddit. So Lemmy has the distinct advantage in that there is already a good platform in place, and all the good content of Reddit (and half of it's value) can be moved over here.
No that's not what I'm trying to say. I'm saying that content creators on Reddit are already being fucked. The only perceivable benefit they get from Reddit is exposure. So I would argue that reposting their content on other platforms benefits them. It can also be done in a respectful and ethical way—providing attributions for example.
Help me understand how reposting fucks the content creators? They are simply having their labor exploited by Reddit. They aren't being compensated for their work, and a billion dollar company is reaping all the financial benefits.
I feel like with all the protests the real core issue, or what people should be angry about was not really hammered home. Reddit is a business and Lemmy is not, right? Reddit's business model relies on labor exploitation of not just the content creators, but the moderators. Reddit expects these people to work for them, but provides no pay and on top of that shows a general disregard, contempt and disgusting for those people who allow them to exist and make their execs rich. That is what I find most disgusting, and feel like this point was just glossed over by everyone that was pissed off by the whole api thing.
I feel you. I still think it might be worth stealing what is worth stealing, if you know what I mean. There's definitely still good content creators over on Reddit.
There's also a neat feature that can take your list of subreddits from a reddit account and help you find their equivalents throughout lemmy.
I tried to use that feature but it looks like reddit has broken two factor auth on their website. I literally can no longer login through a web browser like the tools instructions say to do.
@DrTautology
@lemmy.world