this post was submitted on 29 Jun 2023
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Technology

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[–] stu@lemmy.pit.ninja 14 points 1 year ago (7 children)

I'm a little surprised the drop in activity was that low. What the fuck were people browsing when most of Reddit was blacked out?

[–] DiachronicShear 9 points 1 year ago (4 children)

yeah looks like only 3.6 mil people stopped using the site (out of 52 mil) but I have no clue what was even left during the blackout. Did people just not notice?

[–] AttackBunny 13 points 1 year ago

There are a lot of people who are/were totally ok with Reddit after the blackout starting, only commenting that people are fucking stupid, and they need to shut up about it already. I know a couple people like this.

Honestly, Meta, TikTok, twitter, etc have already shown us people honestly don’t give a shit, as long as they get their serotonin/dopamine fix.

Personally, I haven’t intentionally been back since the 11th, and the only times I’ve accidentally gone there, it was for the 3 seconds it took me to close it down. And I don’t intend to go back.

[–] ZapBeebz 8 points 1 year ago

Honestly it could be just as simple as reddit spooling up the bots so the drop in users only looks low, when in fact the number of real people using the site plunged considerably.

[–] thingsiplay 7 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Stopped using it is one thing, using it less another. 3.6m out of 52 is what? 8% of the entire user base suddenly stopped, including a lot of important mods, which are hard to replace in that quality? And the rest of the user base I can imagine have less activity in Reddit, meaning less content creation, replies and therefore less advertisement seen. And some people may just trolling more than before, trying to destroy Reddit, some use Bots.

The overall quality is less than before, not better I assume. And a little bit less user than before. The site has a bad image now, so I can imagine some are waiting until alternatives are build and grow on Lemmy or Kbin in example and will switch later. So hard numbers of how many people stopped using the site is not telling the entire story. One has to open the book and read the lines, not just judge the cover story.

[–] Dee_Imaginarium 4 points 1 year ago

I think a lot of people scoffing at the numbers don't realize that 8% is not insignificant for a site as robust and long lived as Reddit. That's a pretty huge change in a short period of time. It will be interesting to see what happens when the third party apps shut down.

[–] aka_oscar 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

At least a considerable amount of spanish speaking subs i used to browse where not even aware of the blackout

[–] themobyone 1 points 1 year ago

I forget this how reddit is big in other languages. I'm Norwegian, and in most of the Scandinavian countries reddit is kind of niche. English is my only other language, but I'm sure French, German, and a bunch of asian languages are big too.

Also I guess there are a lot of non-technical people on reddit that use the platform like they use facebook or insta. These people might not care about the changes. Around reddit I see people referring to it as an "app". Reddit was so much better I feel when most users were on a desktop.

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