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javelinexaminer @kbin.social
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Comments 6
Rediscovery of the bygone days of the forums- observation from an ex redditor and my journey to discovering lemmy.world
  • Great write-up.

    Forums definitely had, on the whole, a better quality discussion, friendlier discourse (but not always), and less spam. That said, I feel as though we are romanticizing them a bit as a knee jerk to the cess pool that reddit became.

    The Achilles heel of forums, in my opinion, always was how disparate they were. Each one with different sign up rules and clunky interfaces. And you sometimes really had to go searching to find one that was appropriate for your needs!

    Also, forum owners would shill out to vendors, and some members weren't always welcoming to newcomers. "We answered this four years ago so go rtfm" is not good for conversation and discussion, no matter how true it may be.

    I'm not saying all this to be negative, but rather to say that the fediverse improves on all of these negatives. It can being everything to one place, apps are coming that will further improve the user experience.

    And hopefully those managing the code behind the scenes tweak it along the way to minimize karma whoring and spamming (not sure what can really be done about AI).

    In short, I too am really happy to be here and am thankful for the (probably inevitable) fall of reddit for making me realize how wonderful this is.

  • *Permanently Deleted*
  • Serious question: could reddit every have been a profitable endeavor, and if so, how?

    It seems the overall sentiment in comments is that they had a horrible business model, and they then proceeded to only make it worse. Was it just doomed from the start?

  • Reddit CEO Steve Huffman on blackout: It's expensive to run a company.
  • I'm actually somewhat happy all this happened now. I'm sad for the 3rd party app devs and everyone who suffers from these decisions. And for the wonderful communities and knowledge bases that were shattered.

    But I think it caused me, and many others, to realize that great community and discussions could still be had on the internet, and that we hadn't been having those for quite a while over on reddit.

  • I love how thoughtful everything feels on lemmy
  • I was just saying this to a friend yesterday. My interactions here just feel so much more genuine, like I'm part of a real community. I just really hope it stays that way in the face of unforeseeable growth.