- cross-posted to:
- RedditMigration@kbin.social
- cross-posted to:
- RedditMigration@kbin.social
cross-posted from: https://kbin.social/m/RedditMigration/t/38559
I’ve been seeing a lot of angst and emotion on the Reddit migration, which results in either defeatism or blind optimism. In the end, it probably doesn’t matter, but I wanted to do more fact-based research into the subject.
I put my findings and my analysis into what it would actually take to kill Reddit, based on the deaths of Digg and MySpace. tl;dr it’s a lot less dramatic than most people would think.
Great writeup. What is Lemmy’s niche, I wonder?
Its not corporate owned , its community owned. Its distributed and all the eggs are not in one basket. There are no trackers or analytics or ads.
You can use any instance you like and any apps you like.
Well, yes, as far as software architecture goes, that’s true. But, the article refers to niches more in the content and audience sense. So far, Lemmy users seem to be attempting to replicate their favorite subreddits, which the article warns won’t work in the long run.
I get that but I think it will settle. The sub reddits were something that happened over time and its natural that people might search for a similarly named community here. I suspect many will die off due to lack of activity but what’s left is a good starting point for organic growth.
The analysis of this article maybe simple, but they bear down on a simple truth, successful online communities must be grown organically (rather than copied), and that is the only way to kill the giant that is a Reddit.
This is a great take on the situation. Reddit will die when people stop caring about it, and that will take time.