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Do you feel that there's a lack of discussion on Lemmy on stuff besides the current Reddit and Twitter controversies?

I've been on Beehaw and Lemmy.world for the past two weeks now and while people seem to be posting content that isn't about Reddit or Twitter or how great federated platforms are, such content does not receive as many comments/discussion as topics about the Reddit API controversy, or the current Twitter controversy, etc.

I prefer to sort by "new" when on the main page of either Beehaw or Lemmy.world. Most posts scarcely get a few upvotes and almost no comments. Without comments, I feel far less inclined to leave a comment unless there's a discussion already going on.

It feels like the gravity of discussion is still mostly centered on complaints and discussion about Reddit (or Big Tech in general), despite this platform being billed as a Reddit replacement. Hopefully that changes with time but there's a reason I haven't left Reddit yet.

69 comments
  • While I agree, I can understand why it's so Reddit-oriented. Mostly everyone who came here came from Reddit so news/ drama/ discourse about Reddit is relevant for the vast majority of people. The other reason is a lot of people just joined, so this whole topic isn't as tired out for them.

    • I think too a lot of us are still in shock that a major communication platform we've used for over a decade is just up and gone in 30 days. I'm on the Connect for Lemmy app now and because it's all been developed so fast it's almost hard to remember I'm not still on reddit. And this is coming from someone running their own instance!

  • You have to skip the bigger communities and just sort 'new' on your subscribed view. That way you'll only see content about other topics. It helps me to stay away from the reddit and twitter storm. But people are happy and proud of themselves that they left, so they need to vent.

  • It is to be expected. Once more communities get established, conversation will shift to other topics. I mostly just skip past all the reddit posts. I'm sure they will go down over time.

  • It will blow over. It's just that the whole Reddit debacle is the most relevant thing right now. Check back in a few months.

  • follow communities that post about other topics then?

  • Completely correct. Its not great at thr moment opening it up 12 hours later and still having this meta news.

    It's either Lemmy/reddit drama or memes for my all feed.

    Like posts about other stuff exist but don't get the votes to elevate high enough.

  • Nope. I only look at places I've subscribed to, and I've gone out of my way to track down places that relate to my interests across multiple instances. It's not the most lively, but very little of it focuses on reddit.

    Though you're right, the stuff with twitter, and also youtube, have been major news topics. It's to be expected from major internet resources shooting themselves in the foot.

    • I've done the same, going through fediverse observer and subscribing to all sorts of communities on niche instances and even deploying my own. At this point my main front page feed is very close to what reddit was, but what I don't quite have yet (due to lacking both feature and content) to recreate my interest specific multireddits.

      • How was the experience of hosting your own instance for the sake of personal convenience? It's something I've been considering along side a few other things that might be worth the effort.

  • No, I blocked those communities that talk about Reddit. My feed had been pictures and memes mostly.

  • Nope, because I subscribe to lots of different communities and for the most part none spend much time talking about Reddit.

  • I agree that the all section with default active sorting feels a little to Reddit/Twitter. Things get already much better with sorting by hot or top.

    One thing I wonder is, if people actually know how to use Lemmy subscriptions. Reddit used a algorithm to customize your frontpage and Lemmy doesn't have that. There is one single video on lemmy.world/c/videos with over 1k upvotes while the rest has only between 15 - 30. The difference? That one video ended up in the all section and enough people commented in it.

    My local instance feed is pretty good and has almost no Reddit or Twitter stuff in it. Same goes for my subscription feed.

  • At the moment I definitely don't look at Local or All very often on the homepage because of this. There's plenty of communities out there that definitely just want to discuss their niche, or are at least trying to make sure this is where the focus is. I'm sure people will eventually get to the point where they don't want to share that content and it will pass, but no idea how long that will take.

  • Yeah, just a glance at the posts is what I see from what you describe. I find myself over at Squabbles.io and the community is a lot different with discussions on various topics.

    I still come here to glance, but I’m not engaged because of what you said.

  • @rimlogger

    Without comments, I feel far less inclined to leave a comment unless there’s a discussion already going on.

    I am used to being much more of a lurker, but I find myself jumping in on new posts if I have any thoughts to offer. I figure we can all pitch in a bit to try to stoke conversation.

  • I saw android and selfhost/selfhosted has many content unrelated to reddit there. You can check it.

  • I am on kbin, and no, I do not feel this way. Maybe lemmy filters posts differently by default? Maybe local lemmy.world posts are like that?

69 comments