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Genuine question, what’s the best way to tell if someone is a bot? Just the nature of their content/reposting of articles and such?
Genuine question, what’s the best way to tell if someone is a bot? Just the nature of their content/reposting of articles and such?
That’s seriously surprising, what of reddit is going to still be reddit by the time their IPO starts?
That’s a great article, thanks for sharing
Is it just user activity that’s public? Curious to know about what is preserved on the backend, like if user removed posts/etc get stored somewhere accessible like this too.
Wondering this too, I would love to save some posts to come back to
Trying to break the habit, discussion content isn’t gonna start itself otherwise
Can you explain how this would work a bit? I’m not familiar with the concept, but wondering if it means that funding would pool through a single system and be distributed across different instances?
I think it’s cause everyone here has to actually try and make meaningful content here as opposed to being jaded and doom scrolling while posting among hundreds of others - and getting told to use the search function. Every post rn has an impact so the vibes are good!
I like the idea of a slow increase over time. I remember Reddit did that one chatroom experiment where you started out small. And then merged with larger and larger rooms. Small rooms had at least a chance to hang and chat and the larger rooms turned into twitch chat spam. To a degree maybe the same could be said for comments, on Reddit now I still see thousands of redundant replies to subjects whereas here it’s definitely still fresh if not shorter chains.
Though in terms of niche topics it may definitely need more traffic somehow. I think reddit benefits a lot from its search indexing and if Lemmy ever began to appear in search traffic more like forums did in early Google I could see that improving.