this post was submitted on 10 Jun 2023
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Reddit hasn't really been the same for a long time anyways. I liked the feel of Reddit in the old days better, and this kind of has the same vibe
So many times in the past few months I would open reddit, stare at rhr uninteresting front page and close it. Especially the past few years it has taken an astronomical nosedive, and that's coming from someone who joined in 2013 which some consider too late.
I've been thinking that for a while. I really miss the old feel of reddit. I recently opened it up in archive.org and the content just had a different feel back when I first joined. Also fun seeing the old news stories.
It has felt pretty toxic more recently. Often I’d see something and end up just leaving to do something else, I’ve been describing it as the “two-minutes hate” internally for a while now.
There are some good communities and I’ve done a good job of trimming what I subscribe to, but that “popular” button is too tempting.
Honestly, mainstream social media as a whole is practically a two minutes hate. There's a reason why "doomscrolling" is a term. While I do miss the occasional upsetting posts on r/iamatotalpieceofshit or r/facepalm, honestly having them gone for me is better in the long run.
Very 1984 of you. I should read it again.
This is true. But what we're losing isn't Reddit in its current form. But the history. I was looking at my saved posts. Just remembering why I saved them over the years. Some became Redditlore. Others are stories, poems, artworks that meant so much to me at that given time of my life. I'm thinking about deleting my account, and these will all be gone. I might download them, but realistically, I will not go back to and look through them as I would now. It is not just saying goodbye to Reddit but a small/big part of many people's lives.