I was wondering how the pre-reddit lemmy members feel about the influx of ex-reddit. Have things got worst or better? Is there any lemmy etiquette that we are missing?

  • mourkeer@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I have a pet peeve around people saying “this.” When they agree with someone. Idk why… I was hoping I wouldn’t see that here but unfortunately it’s cropping up.

    My concern is that and a bunch of other reddit-isms flood the site. I don’t mind redditors coming here but I hope the site can still have its own identity.

    There are a few others:

    • “at least the <inanimate object> is ok” on videos where someone gets hurt
    • “no shoes therefore dead”
    • “some ninja is cutting onions”
    • “sir this is a Wendy’s”
    • Etc.

    I mean this reddit post complaining about annoying phrases came out 9 years ago. 9 YEARS. And since then I continue to see so many of those and others.

    https://www.reddit.com/r/AskReddit/comments/1i5cd2/_/

    I don’t want to gatekeep either. But certain phrases repeated over and over is just so irritating.

    • Ducky@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      That kind of stuff irks me a bit as well, but I think it’s human nature. It’s a form of call-and-response where people can show that they’re apart of the community. Friendships are built on shared experiences, and those kinds of memes are instant shared experiences that are being used to build camaraderie. I think the reason it is annoying to users like us is because it feels watered down, like a free ticket in, instead of becoming a part of the community organically. I get both sides, so I don’t actively try to stop people from doing it, I just ignore it.

    • snorkbubs@fedia.io
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      1 year ago

      I’ve seen the low-effort meme comments as well; I hated them on Reddit, and I hate them here. This topic had come up on Reddit many times over the years, and there’s not really a way to combat it, from what I could tell. People with nothing to say still want to participate (e.g. earn fake internet points), and that seems to be a favored way do it.

      Entomology subs like /r/whatsthisbug had a hard rule against comments like “kill it with fire”, “nope”, and “nuke it from orbit”. It was explained in the sidebar, mods would actively remove the comments, and people would downvote them, but it barely made a dent. Scroll to the bottom of a post and you’d see the same stupid “joke” repeated over and over, verbatim.

      These people don’t even look at the other comments, they just drop their canned catchphrase and leave. This is why I like that we have to scroll to the bottom to comment here; at least the numpties have to put in slightly more effort, and hopefully they notice the comment has already been made 30 times. Ah, who am I kidding? Seeing the same comment probably reinforces their desire to post it.

      The entire issue is lame as frig, wish there was a way to stop it. I know I’d be a bad moderator, because I’d just ban them.

    • mcpheeandme@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I really hated when “maybe it’s Maybelline” was popular on Reddit a few years ago. Never made sense to me that anyone would find any value in somebody repeating a dumb corporate tagline.

      • OrangeSliceM
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        1 year ago

        One reason those.comments do so well is that they appeal so broadly (to Americans, in your example).

        Some Lemmy instances will develop their own variety of memes, especially if they are more insular. I think it will make stuff like that a bit more interesting (or maybe it just means that there will be more stuff to be annoyed by).