• Ashtear@lemm.ee
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    9 months ago

    Yeah, mostly in terms of the day-to-day operations of the site remaining largely business as usual, at least in terms of what matters to corporate. Plenty of impotent response abounded, too. For example, one of the largest subreddits, /r/games, never even joined the 48-hour blackout.

    There’s an argument to be made that content quality is down, but that’s a subjective measure, and I’m not even going to try to unpack my own personal bias on that front given I moved here because of this in the first place.

    • Atyno@dmv.social
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      9 months ago

      I stayed awhile longer, but prepped for the worse that came yesterday.

      Honestly, I think it did impact the content objectively for the worse. Now that I’m fully moved into Lemmy I’m recognizing that a bunch of subreddits basically declined into irrelevance after the blackout (and I’m only remembering them as I try to recreate my subscription list here).

      And it kinda affected the vibe of the front page. As of now, I’d describe current reddit as very meta-naval gazing. So many of the posts are basically rival subreddits going “nuh-uh” and “yuh-huh” to each other. There may also be a new algo in use that’s basically encouraging fights between subreddits?

      Edit: I should clarify, I think there’s objectively less actual content with now the literal same content being posted multiple times but with different takes on it.

      • Ashtear@lemm.ee
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        9 months ago

        I was mostly in the niche subreddits anyway, and it’s frustrating that Reddit is essentially still the only searchable website for non-sponsored content in hundreds (if not thousands) of niches. Quality in my niches is still the same ebb and flow that it was.

        There still are questions of validity, though. Message boards like Reddit haven’t really had their payola/Gamergate/astroturfed-FCC-comments moment yet.