Lemmy allows you to edit titles in your posts. Reddit doesn’t, for some obscure reason, allow this.

Lemmy’s community or communities rather, don’t yet feel like anything is as bad as what you’d expect from Reddit. You may know what I’m talking about but as a reminder, I’m talking about posts that don’t quite seem as open minded. I call them small-talk, no-where kind of posts. The kind of posts that equals to a 4 line conversation with anyone in person, on the phone or even online. Never makes it past ‘how are you’ stages.

The nature of the beast though has yet to take effect because it’s not strictly a Reddit thing, it’s more of an internet thing, overall. I presume once Lemmy does reach triple digits in the thousands, we could expect to see some behavior that we don’t like seeing. However…

Lemmy has a registration that can’t be as abused as Reddit’s is. I call Reddit’s registration system, a machine gun for alts. Because of how stupid easy it is, to make an account. If you wanted to, you can stockpile a 100 Reddit accounts on just one e-mail while ignoring verification. And there isn’t anything on Reddit that stops you from this either, just fill a few throwaway forms and boom, you’re back on. Go to AskReddit, make a few empty comments, gain some karma or just bide your time a little until you resume your trolling antics again.

Easy to navigate, a nice little list of communities to hop to.

An engaging community, nothing feels too bait-y, things feel fairly contained. I don’t feel as much as I did with reddit where anything I said that wasn’t looking to instigate an argument, will be antagonized in any way. Reddit has a very spiteful hivemind as I’m sure we’ve all felt it by the DdoS attacks which is something Reddit users have been known to do in the past.

We need more places like Lemmy.

    • MomoTimeToDie@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      Unless, of course, you aren’t a leftist, in which case everyone acts like a middle schooler and refuses to engage even remotely in mature conversation

  • donnachaidh@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I’m not disagreeing about the result, Lemmy definitely feels less spammy/trolly, but either you or I have misunderstood something about registration. As far as I’m aware, any rate-limiting, proof of personhood, email verification, etc. is completely a per-instance thing. So all you’d need is an instance that’s permissive to get heaps of accounts. Or even if there aren’t any permissive ones (that haven’t been defederated), you could host a private instance, or sign up on multiple instances. However permissive Reddit is, I don’t think Lemmy fundamentally has the capability to be particularly restrictive.

    • yiliu@informis.land
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      1 year ago

      I think the difference is that there’s no incentive to rack up karma on Lemmy, so a lot of the trolls and reposters ignore it.

  • HummingBee@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    I know this definitely isn’t the right community to ask this, but I have been struggling to find the “how the fuck does lemmy work” community. So far I’m loving lemmy and everything I’ve experienced. My only concern is that with it’s decentralized fediverse nature, is it impossible for a user to delete a post or comment they make?

    • MomoTimeToDie@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      My only concern is that with it’s decentralized fediverse nature, is it impossible for a user to delete a post or comment they make?

      Yes, though to be fair, you should treat the majority of the internet like this regardless. Between archival web scraping bots and just random people screenshotting, all deleting on a centralized platform does is delete the original. Nothing about every copy people make. I’ve been able to pin plenty of people with receipts about comments they deleted on reddit because a different device still had the push notification with their comment.

  • Alxe@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Lemmy has a very 2000s forum feeling. Hopefully, smaller communities will continue to exists but we’ll still get some well moderated, huge communities like in Reddit.