this post was submitted on 05 Apr 2024
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[–] Alexstarfire@lemmy.world 106 points 7 months ago (47 children)

Man, I thought Lemmy was supposed to be better than Reddit. These comments are proving me wrong.

[–] Cowbee@lemmy.ml 15 points 7 months ago (35 children)

Most of the negative comments are from Lemmy.world users, which is the instance that recieves the bulk of the Reddit crowd before the users find a more fitting instance.

Lemmy.world tends to attract people from Reddit that are too ideological to stay, but want the same thing as Reddit without the enshittification, so they go to the largest generalist instance first. Over time, some leave for more specialized instances, like Beehaw, Lemmy.ml, programming.dev, or blahaj.zone, so that leaves .world usually with newer accounts, or people who just want Reddit 2 before it went to shit.

Not saying everyone from .world is bad, of course not, but what drives users to .world over more niche instances is usually coming straight from Reddit.

[–] danciestlobster@lemm.ee 6 points 7 months ago (30 children)

Wait I am in this comment I left reddit and joined world then wanted to switch to a different one so just joined .ee arbitrarily. Is there a short reference somewhere of how these are all different from each other?

[–] undefinedValue@programming.dev 4 points 7 months ago

Someone once posted a graphic showing how each instance leaned politically and I thought it was pretty useful. Some more important distinctions between them are censorship, many will censor bad words or content they find objectionable and I just couldn’t tolerate how dumb that was so I picked a fairly anarchist anything goes instance.

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