I don’t remember what caused the Voat’s origin, except it involved Reddit HQ. And then it went under in 2020.

What’s different about this time and with Lemmy to make it a feasible alternative to Reddit? Is it random chance?

  • lynny@lemmy.world
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    Voat died because they took a max free speech approach, even allowing racism and stuff. Lemmy does not have a central administration that can make decisions like that, as each instance gets to decide if they federate with another instance or not.

    There’s no doubt going to be a banlist that gets shared amongst the biggest, most popular instances to get rid of the trolls.

    • Earthwormjim91@lemmy.world
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      It wasn’t “even allowing racism and stuff”. It was created pretty much solely to be a safe space for assholes.

      Turns out that doesn’t keep the lights running.

      • kroy@lemmy.world
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        The first big migration happened to Voat when fatpeoplehate was banned.

        • Earthwormjim91@lemmy.world
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          Yeah, assholes.

          Anyone that left Reddit just because they couldn’t belittle and demean people online is an asshole.

    • yukichigai@lemmy.world
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      Voat died because they took a max free speech approach, even allowing racism and stuff.

      It cannot be stressed enough how core this was to Voat’s identity, and also how much it poisoned the entire platform. When even objecting to bigotry is against the ethos of the site then there’s no way to build a healthy community, much less an inclusive one.

      Also if anyone is curious how much of a cesspool Voat became, here’s the most “upvoated” for the month just six months before the site shut down. Warning: lots of bigotry.

      • VoxAdActa@kbin.social
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        If that showed up on some Lemmy instance, you’d still have people saying “Defederation is bad! Marketplace of ideas! Just block them and move on! It’s just one person!” :sigh:

        • yukichigai@lemmy.world
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          Chances are they’d be screaming it into the void with how fast their instance would get defederated though. :P

      • Donjuanme@lemmy.world
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        I need to take warnings a lot more seriously on this site. That’s the second time I disregarded a warning and hate myself for it.

        I remember when voat happened, I only wish it took more of Reddit (and maybe a ceo) with it.

          • alaphic@lemmy.world
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            Same. I don’t even understand how you can hold such comically evil fucking viewpoints… Like, Disney villains aren’t that atrocious.

      • Rob@lemmy.world
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        Holy shit, that’s bad. Who would want to be liable for hosting deplorable stuff like that?

      • Ko'vari@lemmy.ml
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        Huh. That archive looks just like I’m looking at /pol.

        What a cesspool. I can’t help but laugh.

    • TThor@kbin.social
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      On top of that, Voat got their main population-spike around the time reddit was cracking down on racist and extremist subreddits, so those are the type of users who shaped the culture of Voat. Lemmy, on the other hand, is getting their population spike from enthusiast users, I.E. the 10% of people most responsible for voting, commenting, posting, and just in general contributing to the site. Therefore, those are the people shaping the growing culture of Lemmy, doing so in a mostly positive way.

      There is a phenomenon known as the “Eternal September”. In the earliest internet, the vast majority of internet users were college student. Therefore, every September when freshmen started school, the online communities would get a massive influx of new users; These new users were often poorly behaved or ill-fitted to the culture of the communities, but over time they would acclimate to the local culture and become just more normal users. This was known as the “September Effect”.

      And then one year the internet started gaining small mainstream attention, and suddenly these chatrooms were being constantly flooded with new, ill-behaved users all the time; And because this “September” never ended, the culture of these communities ended up being washed away by the new people, and irreversibly changed forever; hence the “Eternal September”.

      The moral of the story, too many new people to a community too fast can overrun the existing cultural dynamic, and so either you need to be very restrained in how quickly you let new people join so they can gradually assimilate, or you need the people joining to already share the same culture you desire.

    • CoderKat@kbin.social
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      Plus the kinds of people that migrated to Voat were… Not good people. IIRC, it was particularly the banning of FatPeopleHate that got many to move to Voat. The kind of people who’d quit a website because they said to stop harassing people for being fat are not good people. By comparison, this time, we’re migrating because Reddit is being disrespectful towards frankly all their users, but also particularly mods and the visibility impaired.

    • lazylion_ca@lemmy.ca
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      Voat was also competing with reddit during a period of growth by appealing to the more toxic elements of the communities. There wasn’t enough of them to sustain an entire service and remain solvent, and they didn’t bring anything new to the experience. It was just a reddit clone.

      The big difference now is that reddit corp has decided to alienate a severe chunk of their userbase.

      I also suspect there were a lot of people who wanted to be part of certain communities, but weren’t thrilled with the reddit format. There just wasn’t anything else.

      Those users are now open to alternatives like Lemmy, or Discord or another federated service. Reminds me of IRC in the 90s. If you got bored of efnet, connect to another network.

      • 2pt_perversion@lemmy.world
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        And a lot of the users Reddit decided to alienate are mods…Aka the ones who put in the effort to grow their subs in the first place…

        Voat was the worst of Reddit while this exodus has the chance to be the best of Reddit.

    • exohuman@kbin.social
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      Yeah, I see people advocating for that here, but the truth is that most people don’t want to deal with constant hate and trolls. People want to feel welcome in a community.

      • Skepticpunk@lemmy.world
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        It turns out that people stop valuing things like “free speech” and “tolerance” when people try to use those values to force them to tolerate assholes.

    • goat@sh.itjust.works
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      Oh it certainly wasn’t free speech. Tons of users trolling neo-nazis got banned.

    • bumbly@readit.buzz
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      The strength of the fediverse is that there can be a right wing fediverse, a left wing fediverse, a centralist fediverse, yada yada yada. Entire networks of different, unconnected instances can exist. There will probably be instances in between that act as bridges or for gathering stats.

      It will be interesting to watch, but at least people will be able to join the instances with communities they like. The problem of course is that echo chambers are more likely to evolve, but it’s not like that isn’t the case right now.

      And once we get instance bridged with the dark web, it could allow content from countries like China, North Korea, Iran, and other places that don’t want information getting out.

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        I think we’re already seeing that a lot of the groups are going to be left-leaning, and since the system is decentralized by design, it’s not going to be attractive to people that are right-wing and have authoritarian views. E.g., they won’t be able to force other people to see what they say. (Remember the shitstorm of whining when TheDonald was removed from the front page so that 99% of people didn’t see it anymore?)

    • Ghostalmedia@lemmy.world
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      It also helps that this wave of Lemmy’s new users are unified around some common centrist causes. Like not fucking up the user experience and not lying to its end users.

      Votes big influx of users happened when far right wing subreddits got shut down. That created a pretty toxic place.

    • Biscuit@kbin.social
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      I don’t know, I was there in the beginning. I think it died because it had no real content, compared to reddit. And, all anyone talked about was reddit, or reposted stuff from reddit, just like we’re seeing here. I think this might stick a bit better because reddit is way bigger than it was back then, so even if the same super small % of users came over, it would still be quite a bit more content.

      For comparison of how negligible all the Lemmy fediverse is, there are ~40k active users this month. Reddit has over 50 million active users. So, that’s around 0.1% of reddit users. Literally 99.9% of reddit are not here.

      I think it’s probably doomed. It’ll never overtake reddit. But, it’ll be a nice, quiet, alternative.

      • entropicshart@lemmy.world
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        Honestly - I agreed with the first paragraph of your comment and was going to upvote, but all the edits made me reconsider; this is a place to share our thoughts, not worry about how many people up/down-ticked our comment.

        Throw out a thought and forget the “karma”!

        • Biscuit@kbin.social
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          but all the edits made me reconsider
          not worry about how many people up/down-ticked our comment.

          The first was an afterthought that I wanted to include. The second was because I realized my time trying Voat was close to the hate subs that the majority of the comments here are about. Neither were about up/down, I was just trying to be polite by making the additions clear, since there’s no indicator in my UI.

          The last one was a lighthearted joke. I thought the last few sentences of it, and the first few, and the middle ones, would make that clear. With an empty /m/funny and /m/jokes, and a /m/memes full of constipation, I’m beginning to suspect my humor may not be well align here.

          But, I do think it’s silly that given an opinion about my experience, on a question requesting an opinion about that event, results in downvotes. I guess I don’t get the point of this place. If we’re supposed to ignore karma, and what the larger community thinks of a comment, the score (and authors!) probably shouldn’t be placed at such a predominant position with such a large size, indicating importance and worth (I’m on kbin UI).

      • CheshireSnake@iusearchlinux.fyi
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        I think it’s probably doomed. It’ll never overtake reddit. But, it’ll be a nice, quiet, alternative.

        Why is it doomed? I think if it becomes a small alternative to reddit, it’s a win. Killing reddit was never on the table - it’s just too big and mainstream for that to happen (see Facebook and Twitter). Will it be more successful than Voat? If we can sustain the community/activity that we have now, then yes.

        Here’s a quick litmus test for all the downvoters. How many times have you gone to reddit today?

        I’ll go over that. It’s probably a week since I last went to reddit (this includes teddit and those other ways to go there). I don’t even have an account or reddit app anymore. All the reddit news I get are from here and discord. Last time i went there was to delete my accounts and use Power Delete.

        • grue@lemmy.world
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          Killing reddit was never on the table - it’s just too big and mainstream for that to happen (see Facebook and Twitter).

          Sure it is (see Digg).

      • DaniAlexander@kbin.social
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        I suspect your downvotes are due to your ridiculous all or nothing speculation. No one can base the future on what’s happening right now. Yet you’re speculating it’s already failed. What a shit take.

        We don’t know if the fediverse will succeed yet on a larger scale. Sometimes migration is instant, like with digg, sometimes it takes time, like with Facebook exodus which is continuing as i type this. Not to mention people weren’t prepared for this migration so none of the tools to make it a replacement have been in place. But now people are actively working on building out the community. Maybe we’ll know in a couple years if this is a successful endeavor on a Reddit type scale. But we don’t know yet.

        • Biscuit@kbin.social
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          your ridiculous all or nothing speculation

          How is it ridiculous? It’s my 2 cent opinion, lightly founded in observation of when this happened several times in the past, with reddit and several other platforms, to a question in a forum about questions, that requires speculation about the future.

          There’s not a correct or incorrect answer here, just a bunch of idiots guessing. Feel free to influence the future with downvotes though. I’ll continue enjoying reading what people have to say.

      • Mereo@lemmy.world
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        I used the internet since 1998 and I remember when Reddit was this little known site with not a lot of users. It took years for Reddit to get where it is right now.cl Lemmy will likely take that trajectory or perhaps, be a second Reddit but with better discussions.

        For Lemmy, if all goes well, will take years to have a significant amount of active users. Perhaps subreddits will slowly deteriorate, pushing more people toward Lemmy… No one knows what the future holds…

      • gk99@kbin.social
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        edit: I was part of this attempted migration, not the hate one. This isn’t the first blackout for reddit being shitty.

        It’s the first one where average users were affected beyond the blackout, though. Other than the alt-righters nobody wanted there and weren’t going to follow when they left. Patriots.win isn’t a real community either, it’s just constant Trump, Biden, and “democrats bad” content.

        • Biscuit@kbin.social
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          It’s the first one where average users were affected beyond the blackout, though.

          I think this makes the very big assumption that the average user uses third party apps. All of the polls on reddit, that I saw, suggested this is not true. For example. If that’s true, then the average Redditor is only being inconvenienced by the blackout and related shenanigans.

          Was there a wider poll that showed non-negligible third party usage?

      • HelixDab@kbin.social
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        I haven’t logged into reddit since overwriting and deleting 12 years of content. So, I dunno man. I also haven’t logged into Twitter since Musk took over.

        I think that you’re right, that reddit won’t die. But I think that things like this, if not this exact thing, are going to be reasonable alternatives for many people.

      • Bucket_of_Truth@kbin.social
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        The reasons were less tangible before. Taking away popular apps will have a much bigger impact than some subreddit drama.

        • Biscuit@kbin.social
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          Taking away popular apps to a social network that doesn’t have any yet? What? Most users won’t see that as a positive.

          We would have to see the user stats related to reddit app usage, to talk in an informed way about this, along with the assumption that reddit doesn’t improve their app, which will probably be forced onto spez (assuming he isn’t kicked out as an atonement/scape goat).

          edit: Here’s a quick litmus test. How many times have you gone to reddit today?

            • Biscuit@kbin.social
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              Ok, now let’s ask the 99.9% of Redditors that aren’t here. You take the left 25,000,000, I’ll take the right, meet back in 5. Go!

              edit: Oh man, I’m out of breath. We might need help. How about every single lemmy user helps us! That’s only about 1,300 people we each have to ask! Well, 1,299 for me. At 4 seconds each, that’s should only be about 1.5 hours. See you all soon!

              • BlackCoffee@kbin.social
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                Should we care that other people still use reddit?

                Do you have to chose one or the other?

                Why are people so hell bent to “take over” Reddit?

                I found an alternative in Kbin and Lemmy that suits my needs and focuses on user experience and growing communities instead of growing the pockets of a handful of people.

                I decide to not use Reddit anymore because the upper echelon can go fuck themselves.

                Is it so weird to have a set of values and stop using a service/product, because they cross the boundaries one has set for themselves?

                I have used Reddit for more than a decade and I haven’t missed it all.

                I am here because I enjoy it and not because I have a deeper desire for Reddit to evaporate out of nowhere.

                • Biscuit@kbin.social
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                  I think most of the answers to your questions can be answered by the question that this comment section is responding to, to understand the framing that I’m commenting in:

                  What’s different about this time and with Lemmy to make it a feasible alternative to Reddit? Is it random chance?

                  But, this is the first and last Reddit related thread that I plan on participating in, so I’ll be cheering with you, if we ever get the miracle of reddit evaporating. Although, I would be worried where they would all end up.

                  • BlackCoffee@kbin.social
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                    It is Random chance.

                    I have read your comments;

                    “I think it’s probably doomed. It’ll never overtake reddit. But, it’ll be a nice, quiet, alternative.”

                    No one knows if it is doomed.

                    You have to start somewhere but you can’t expect a platform that has seen an huge influx of users the past weeks to immediately operate on the scale of what Reddit does.

                    “I humbly apologize for my personal, speculative, opinion about the unknowable future. The downvotes have made me realize my math was wrong, my opinion is wrong, and I am wrong. My corrected opinion is that Lemmy will overtake Meta, Mastadon, Twitter, and Google (wtf is reddit!?), and every upvote will be worth $1000, making everyone rich! Or, we can have fun guessing, and wait and see how things go. I hope they go well!”

                    Who is claiming the above?

                    The fun thing is that Mastodon is in your list and before the fuckery with Twitter it didn’t really have traction.

                    Why can’t lemmy/Kbin be the same in a year from now?

                    The problem for Reddit, is that it made people actually look for alternatives. It is stupid for a competitor to make it’s customers aware of the competition, but Reddit did exactly that.

                    Maybe it flops, maybe it stays “niche”, maybe it explodes in popularity.

                    I think it is indeed random chance and just being at the right place at the right time.

              • GunnarRunnar@kbin.social
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                What are you on about? Yeah obviously people still visit Reddit, it was stupid of you to ask in the first place. I thought this kind of idiocy would’ve stayed at Reddit.

      • refugeered@kbin.social
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        I do not know how to solve this but the disagree = down vote thing has gone crazy. It seems to have become next to impossible to have a civil discussion online nowadays about an alternate opinions. It feels like everyone just wants to have their beliefs confirmed and never have their opinions questioned.

        • Biscuit@kbin.social
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          There was a time when messages didn’t have scores. ;)

          I like the idea of the score modifying placement in the comment tree, but not being visible. I also like the idea of a more expressive score (maybe normalized), I suppose like the emoji systems do, to indicate funny, angry, etc, rather than some silly binary.

        • dustyData@lemmy.world
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          Or maybe up and downvotes are meaningless and karma has no value. I think it’s a way of polling opinion on a topic. Lemmy is not Reddit. Users have no accumulated karma, downvotes don’t hide comments and Post’s default comment sort is by New.

          • TheDeadGuy@kbin.social
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            People are really bent out of shape with others disagreeing with them. You aren’t being silenced, you’re being polled and that’s not a problem.

            Now if you are harassed because of it, that’s a different subject than a simple downvoted. That’s why I love the transparency here

        • assassin_aragorn@lemmy.world
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          I’ve had plenty of civil discussions online where I had an alternate opinion from the zeitgeist. On Reddit.

          Generally speaking, if you aren’t alt right scum, people are agreeable. If you believe people should be allowed to live how they want as long as it isn’t hurting people, and nobody should be treated differently because of an inherent, born characteristic, people may not be happy with your opinion but they’ll at least listen to you.

      • BlueForestDev@kbin.social
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        tbh the culture here is reddit in its purest form right now. once they start sanitizing everything here again I’m out. One opinion allowed ONLY and if you dont align you’re a NAZI and FAR RIGHT TROLL

          • BlueForestDev@kbin.social
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            Perfect. ‘Downvote’ me too so you can really show it to me how WRONG I am.

            If you want to see what happens if this culture permeates here just look at Mastodon. Negative growth, barely any interaction and it’s the same few people shouting into the void. I checked some mutuals who proudly announced they’d move to Mastodon and most haven’t posted anything this year. Still posting regularly on Twitter tho :clownface:
            A lot of users here are the same, ‘move’ here to show they’re protesting and then stop posting in a few weeks or months and back to reddit.
            Some clown mod made over 50 magazines/subs on kbin. Hasnt posted 1 comment since a little over a week. Bio reads: ‘Proud owner of xxx communities.’ lol

            If there is no unique culture/point to this platform and it’s just reddit 2.0 then people will simply go back to reddit.

        • goat@sh.itjust.works
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          Having been called fascist, troll, sealion, and all manner of insults because I dared disagree – Yeah, you’re totally right.

          People gotta learn to deal with speech they dislike or disagree with. That’s the beauty of democracy.

          • Falmarri@lemmy.world
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            This is the least self aware post ever. You should learn to deal with speech you dislike instead of complaining about being called a fascist