I was looking at reddit today, and the front-page felt like nothing happened. I scrolled and scrolled and scrolled and clicked into comments. Everything is popping off buzzing with activity. All the subreddits I was subscribed to that went dark are now back up and business as usual.
I knew we were a minority, but I didn’t expect this level of apathy. It feels like Spez was 100% right and this did in fact blow over. What’s your take on it it? I didn’t expect Reddit to immediately be a failure, but man I guess I expected a bigger impact than that.
I view the protest as a shot across the bow. The warning about how much impact the changes are going to cause if Reddit doesn’t back off. Reddit management has gone with “damn the torpedoes; full speed ahead”. It is the next round that is going to indicate whether mods and users are really ready to bail.
Digg didn’t die all at once. It was a very slow, miserable death.
And even now, Digg still exists, with some users even. As long as the Threadiverse gets better and Reddit gets worse, we’ll see continued waves of people leaving.
The real question is whether it’ll look like Digg -> Reddit (where most everyone left eventually) or Twitter -> Mastodon (where large groups of people were “too confused” and didn’t move).
I think lemmy/kbin is easier to grasp for people familiar with how reddit works, since the subreddit structure is kinda similar to the instance structure (with an additional layer)
I hesitated with Mastodon because I couldn’t figure out what instance to join, but lemmy was pretty simple to figure out