this post was submitted on 29 Aug 2024
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The dumb masses always eventually follow the smart people. Reddit was full of mostly smart people in the beginning, if you can believe that.
And this is why I'm perfectly happy with Lemmy being the size that it is. There certainly are trade-offs - I wish niche communities were bigger - but is it worth bringing in all the other crap that comes in, like all the shit you see on Twitter? No, in my opinion.
I remember that /r/all was actually pretty educational back in the day. There were specific users that you would know by their user names that always posted something insightful.
The decline started somewhere around 2011-2013.
It got much, much worse a few years after that. I was amazed to see my first “conservative” on reddit.
I blame Digg for failing. It increased Reddit's popularity too fast, which was a bad thing bringing too many people, fucking up the culture reddit had built (which wasn't much, but it was ours).
Oh man, in 2024 I never thought I'd see some Reddit oldhead still complaining about the eternal September following Digg's fall...
Oh, that's when I first saw that place. Left surprised that there are still normal forums in the interwebs.
isn't that why the hippie movement ended?