I don't mind the Reddit posts until 7/1. On that day, if the apps go offline, Reddit will have won for all intents and purposes and it'll be time for Kbin and Lemmy to just be themselves and stop talking about Reddit.
What do you think?
Will the average person proactively seek options to their habits, once they know they might have to change them? Or will they continue with their existing habits to the last second, and only then seek options?
I think some people who haven't left yet do want to leave, but some are ready for the fediverse and others aren't due to it not being at a stage that feels polished and straightforward to use. For those I think squabbles is an alternative since while it's destined for the same fate that has met past social media companies at least it's an effort to move from the current established corporate juggernaut of community based social media.
So I think more options need to be given aside from just fediverse until that is so easy anyone can use it without thought. Otherwise they'll have to go back to reddit if they can't get used to it. Which is the sense I got from people who have been using squabbles and started using it over reddit.
My belief is that people who continue to use reddit normally don't really care strongly enough to leave. They are only upset about the third party apps, but not enough to quit reddit. They don't care about wanting a decentralized internet and having a platform for the people by the people. Even the use of the official app isn't even concerns of the permissions that could extract lot of additional data to build a more accurate profile of users to resell to marketers. I believe for them the outrage will pass. In the end they want to keep using reddit and aren't looking to leave. It's just noise in the outrage, but not an actual willingness to follow through.
Not exactly. The apps going offline will spring a new set of outrage, and another migration. After that it'll die down, with people either leaving reddit or staying there. And the ones that stay may eventually move away, but only if kbin/lemmy grow more engaging than reddit.