We have to be vigilant though. Can't let what happened to Voat happen again.
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Woot! Iβm excited for Lemmyβs future
This pleases me.
For perspective:
r/GothStyle has 159k subscribers, r/tarot has 306k, r/cycling has 348k, r/rpg and r/political humor have 1.5m each, r/ExplainLikeImFive has 22.3m, and r/AskReddit has 41.4m.
Make of that what you will. I'm just giving numbers.
This is interesting.
Obviously, I don't have stats on things like the % active accounts vs inactive and such, so this is pure speculation.
If you look at the hot sorted posts on r/GothStyle they seem to get around 100 or so points per post. Note, this isn't a direct translation into upvotes. It also says there is 145 people online - Does that mean roughly 2/3 of active users vote stuff to hot? ~100 people holding up a niche community with a fraction of those the posters themselves.
So in effect ~0.1% of a subreddit's subscribers makes things happen. I always baselessly suspected that Reddit fluffs up the numbers to make engagement seem like it is much greater than it is, but this is 1000x smaller than the sub count suggests.
I'm sceptical of my maths here but r/PCMasterRace is similar. Out of nearly 8mil subscribers, roughly 8000 online.
Doesn't really mean anything. Facebook has around 3.4 billion active monthly users. Reddit has around 400 million. I'd still take the latter than the former. Lemmy will keep growing. Probably will never have 100s of millions of users and that's fine. More users can be a good thing but by itself the numbers mean nothing.
The difference is in the active number of content creators and participants. Itβs nice to have a sub with ten million followers but if Gallowboob is the only one posting and his 250 bots are the only ones voting itβs just a popular Twitter account. That is good for ad revenue but shit for interaction.
Give me a vibrant, intelligent, argumentative (in a good way) 100,000 over a passive ten million any day.
Does that include kbin.social users?
probably not, since kbin isn't Lemmy.
Good! I'm loving the vibe here.
i've read kbin might get merged with lemmy (or vice versa, whatever) , but cannot find the post talking about it anymore
anyone to confirm whether it's true (perhaps was I just dreaming , after all)
Is there any benefit to merging if it's all just federated between them?
Reddit is blocked in my country so I have to open reddit using dns, because lemmy is already there, this is an opportunity to find a community forum for a replacement for reddit in my country.
Every time I see this chart I wonder what the huge sudden drop is earlier. Does anyone know?
instances might've shut down.
Yup finally seeing a lot of good conversations now. Which was really always the best part of Reddit.