Does karma actually effect your account on reddit?
Does karma actually effect your account on reddit?
The more users the more content there is though which is ultimately what I want as a user.
This is even more important for more niche communities a lot of which are still very quiet/dead/non-existent on Lemmy relative to reddit.
I think it’s chicken and egg.
I find it hard to spend much time on Lemmy cause there’s not as much content being posted… Which is because there aren’t as many users… But users won’t come until there’s content…
I also still stand by the whole instance thing being confusing for someone to join (though I do understand its benefits I guess)
Thanks. I’ve been using liftoff too but have been finding it a little buggy at times.
Hoping Boost for Lemmy will launch soon
Which client are you using now?
Does GDPR cover anonymous data?
And is reddit history anonymous in a legal sense?
I’d be interested to know what the % is for movies and TV to be honest. I know Dr Who for example has like 100 episodes that have just been lost. There’s no copies of them anywhere that anyone knows of.
You need to sneak it into their house and put it up somewhere!
I mean, at the moment I’ll just take most active. I believe in the idea of the fediverse giving us multiple communities for different vibes of talking about the same topics but for now I’ll just take having communities that are a bit more active
Sorry I think you misinterpret what I was saying.
Im saying that those who don’t care about it are also likely the ones that need to care about it the most.
It’s worth comparing similar communities on different instances to make sure you find the most active group.
I went for a 5 year mortgage rather than a 2 year at my last renewal. With how much rates have increased by recently, I think this will have saved me about £15k by the end of the 5 years.
I feel like Cambridge Analytics stuff was about picking out who might be vulnerable to those types of political campaigns and by nature there’s probably a bit of a correlation between that type of vulnerability and a lack of understanding of why their privacy is important.
The people who recognise it’s important are unlikely to be the ones picked out by these groups anyway
My app only really stopped working yesterday.
I wouldn’t say massively different, but I do find it pretty stale content wise recently. Only started using Lemmy today and worry that it’s just a bit empty content wise for the moment…
Ahh, so not really a threat to Lemmy then? Like they aren’t really trying to be the same thing…
I think the base website doesn’t explain it well. Like if you go to the main page I didn’t find it obvious at all how to actually start using Lemmy.
I think reddit changed a lot in the last 10 years. It went from lots of small unique communities where there was really good discussion to everywhere kind of just being an echo chamber where if you disagreed you were just down voted out of the discussion rather than being able to just talk about your different points of view.
What is threads?
You only need an account on one server. You can still subscribe/post/comment to communities on other servers but you kind of do it as a visitor (though it doesn’t make any difference).
Some of the servers aren’t friends with each other though, so there are some servers where if you have an account there you won’t be able to interact with communities on specific other servers
Could instances not basically do that here too though?