Just checking the place out after not being able to stand Reddit and its policies anymore. Their policing of Luigi posts was the last straw for me. Going public ruins companies.

  • Mwa@lemm.ee
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    5 days ago

    Welcome to Lemmy,I hope you like this place!

    I use the Android app Raccoon it looks nice + feature packed, On IOS you can use Mlem and Echo(Proprietary)

    If you can you may also choose to spin up your own instance.

    I got tired of The Toxic Redditors which what made me leave in about September 2023 and the companies weird and awful decisions.

  • Zement@feddit.nl
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    6 days ago

    Welcome, have a seat… remember when the narwal bacon or some shit like that… back then reddit is todays Lemmy.

    • bfg9k@lemmy.world
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      6 days ago

      Hah, I remember being a cringey teenager and spruiking Reddit to all my friends with the narwhal shit

      Lemmy now definitely feels smaller than old reddit but has much better quality posts and posters

  • Resonosity@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    6 days ago

    Welcome to Lemmy! I’m glad you joined. There are tons of tutorials out there for how to use the platform, but if it helps, here’s my advice:

    I use the Android app Sync For Lemmy. Reminds me a lot of rif is fun from before Reddit shut down 3rd party API access about a year ago.

    Lemmy.World is the name of the biggest instance on Lemmy. Think of it as a discord channel with different sub-channels except those are called communities here (and instead of r/ for subreddits we have c/ for communities).

    There are still trolls here. What’s nice about Lemmy is that you can block individual trolls, communities of trolls, or even instances of trolls (if you deem them so). Conversely, if you get banned from any of the above, you can make a new account on any other instance (like dbzer0 or shitjustworks) and still have access to the content from those people/places. The same is true if certain communities/instances change their policies on things like Luigi, which happened on Lemmy.World recently. I switched over to dbzer0 to avoid that censorship and to also see stuff about pirating - that which is banned on Lemmy.World.

    Lastly, we can see posts/comments from other people on the Fediverse, like from Mastodon (Twitter alternative) and others.

    Hope you enjoy your stay here! Lemmy is primarily tech- and politics-focused rn, but a lot of people draw parallels to Reddit’s early days, which is good!

        • Sonor@lemmy.world
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          5 days ago

          What i meant to ask is if i need to do anything special to see posts from mastodon

          • Resonosity@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            5 days ago

            No I think they just show up randomly. You’ll have to look out for Lemmy posts to see if anyone from Mastodon comments. Next to their name is their instance, so if I were on Mastodon, my username would be something like: Resonosity@mastodon.social or something

            • Sonor@lemmy.world
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              5 days ago

              ah, ok! I’ll do that. I’m mostly using lemmy.world, so hopefully i’ll see it, but i wanna read through all that is said here and see if i could take advantage of more of what lemmy has to offer

          • Resonosity@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            5 days ago

            They just show up in comments or posts on Lemmy. Usually you’ll see people use a lot of @'s and #'s but they show up from time to time. I’m not sure if there’s a way to see comments from Mastodon specifically

  • Sergio@slrpnk.net
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    7 days ago

    here’s a tip:

    • subscribe to communities, then browse by “subscribed” and “new”
    • when you run out of new posts on your subscribed communities, browse by “all” and “new”, and look for more communities to subscribe to
  • Resol van Lemmy@lemmy.world
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    7 days ago

    I joined a few weeks after the Reddit API was made paid, but I left Reddit the day it happened. Better late than never, I guess. Welcome to Lemmy.

    If you wanna delete your Reddit account, make sure you use PowerDeleteSuite to get rid of all of your posts and comments before clicking that delete button on your account. Not doing so will keep your contributions to the website live.

  • Swordgeek@lemmy.ca
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    7 days ago

    Welcome!

    You’ll find that the volume here is much (much much MUCH!!!) lower than reddit. As frustrating as this can be, the only solution is to stand and create more content. More worthwhile posts, more comments, more interaction. At its height, that was exactly what made reddit successful.

  • magnetosphere@fedia.io
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    7 days ago

    If your experience is like mine when I ditched reddit, it’ll take a few months for the learned defensiveness and self-editing to wear off. People seem more mature here (except for our sense of humor) and I’ve found less trolling and sealioning.

    The interface quality is down, but the quality of content is way, way up. It more than makes up the difference.

      • Excrubulent@slrpnk.net
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        6 days ago

        It’s really hard for openly reactionary communities to get a hold here, because rather than being given free reign by fiat, they get defedded. The reactionaries are definitely here, and lemmy.world among other open instsnces are a bit of a haven for them, but even lemmy.world has to make concessions to the fact that if they become too much of a shithole then the other instances will make alternatives and render them irrelevant.

        It turns out that without a big daddy institution to shelter them, reactionaries don’t thrive, their communities can’t metastisise, and they are super unpopular. That’s the big difference.

          • Excrubulent@slrpnk.net
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            6 days ago

            I think I’ve blocked like one or two obvious trolls in my time here, and it’s been relatively peaceful. I haven’t felt any need to block people for the most part.

            • Trainguyrom@reddthat.com
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              5 days ago

              Most of the people I blocked were heavy participants in hexbear and it was before instance blocking was exposed for users. But I agree, its pretty chill compared to Reddit. Although its way less friendly than Mastadon, so lately I’ve been a lot more active on Mastadon

      • bokherif@lemmy.world
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        6 days ago

        Yeah but only people who didn’t find what they were looking for in reddit are here. Which is essentially a good thing haha

    • ComradeMiao@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      7 days ago

      I’d say people are very defensive and aggressive still but the filters and blocking helps me a lot. Though I’ve been sassy I do want to try to make a better nicer place

      • kreskin@lemmy.world
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        6 days ago

        Agreed. a block of a username or six does wonders. It wasnt as possible to do that on reddit.

  • SkyNTP@lemmy.ml
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    7 days ago

    Been on Lemmy since the App/API ban. Haven’t looked back at reddit since, other than the occasional search result pointing to someone’s q&a.

    Side note, anyone else tired of all the sanitized AI slop that pervades search results? The only websites worth visiting these days are user forums (incl. reddit/Lemmy) and wikipedia.

    • abbadon420@lemm.ee
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      7 days ago

      The AI slop isn’t the issue. AI could be a blessing. It’s the corpos that are ruining it, like they are ruining everything else

    • petrol_sniff_king
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      6 days ago

      Yeeeeess. I need to install something that auto-removes google’s AI answer at the top of every page.

  • Kichae@lemmy.ca
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    6 days ago

    Welcome! Always happy to see new faces showing up.

    This place is significantly smaller than Reddit, and also significantly more spread out. It grows on you, but it’s important to look beyond the similarities between how lemmy.world and Reddit look. Under the hood, these are very different spaces.

    “Lemmy” is actually a large network of independently operated Lemmy-based (or not… more on that later) websites. Each website has their own rules, and their own “communities” (AKA sublemmies, magazines, groups, etc.). You’re using one of, if not the, largest website in the network, and the one that is probably most Reddit-like (pre-IPO) in terms of rules and policies. It’s a general purpose content aggregator.

    There are quite a few other medium-to-large general purpose content aggregator sites on the network. lemm.ee comes to mind, as does sh.itjust.works. And, of course, lemmy.ca, which is where I’m commenting from. Each of these websites has its own communities, and houses mirrors of remote communities that their users have subscribed to. Remote communities with local subscribers synchronize with the host website every so often (it can be quite frequently, but usually isn’t instantaneously). This makes the whole thing kind of like being on a web forum, but being able to follow topics from other web forums.

    As you can imagine, this means there are some niche websites on the network. ttrpg.network is dedicated to table top gaming; startrek.website is focused on… I don’t know, some tv show or something; programming.dev hosts a bunch of communities focused on software engineering; lemmy.kde.social is focused on the KDE desktop environment for linux. These are often low-population sites, but they can see a lot of off-site engagement. Focused sites like that are great sites to use if your primary interest is the topic at hand; it really makes the Local feed super valuable.

    If you remember that we’re not all using the same website, and that the different websites are, in fact, different websites, with their own rules, cultures, and norms, it helps grok the space a lot more. It also makes it easier to understand why there might be 8 different politics communities, and that c/politics on lemmy.world might be very different, both in terms of who is posting there, and also what they’re interested in discussing, from c/politics on lemmy.ca, or on aussie.zone.

    Now, one thing that’s not obvious from lemmy.world (or any Lemmy-based website, really), is that not every website you have access to here is actually running Lemmy. kbin.earth and rimworld.gallery both run mbin, which is a different content aggregation webserver. community.nodebb.org runs nodebb, a web forum server.

    People have access to Lemmy communities from an even wider range of website types. Users from Mastodon-based websites, Friendica-based websites, Hubzilla-based websites, and probably quite a few more.

    We’re all on different websites. Some of those websites are significantly more different than others. That shapes this space in ways we haven’t even begun to truly explore yet. And it adds a little jank.

    But the jank is worth it, as far as I’m concerned.