When the whole Reddit fiasco started happening, I saw a lot of people wiping and deleting their Reddit accounts and moving elsewhere, like here on Lemmy.
Now that it’s starting to die down a little bit, does anyone regret doing that? Or are you glad that you took that step?
14 years, 17 accounts, ~2000000 karma. Nuked everything: deleted comments and submissions, de-modded myself, unsubbed from everything, gilded various protest content using the coins I’d been given over the years, bought a cool Apollo app t-shirt, walked out and walked away. Nope, don’t miss it; I’m exploring kbin and tildes, and getting my meme content from imgur. Which is ironic in a way, because the sole reason imgur was created was because reddit refused to allow native images.
Are you having regrets? It’s okay to have regrets.
What is kbin and tildes?
Always weird to read comments like this while on Kbin. Kbin is another “threadiverse” instance. Like Lemmy or whatever.
Yeah, it becomes so second nature that I’m on kbin that it’s a weird kind of dissonance, like someone asking what’s Reddit on Reddit.
I love everyone always saying “Lemmy, what’s XYZ?” or whatever not realizing there’s a good chunk of people not on Lemmy.
It does get annoying when I see Lemmy-specific questions in my feed, though.
Kbin is a part of the Fediverse and is similar to Lemmy. I have a kbin.social account and am replying to you from kbin. (I subscribe to a lot of Lemmy communities via kbin).
Tildes is not a part of the Fediverse. It is a text-driven private forum basically created and run by one person. You need an invite from a Tildes account holder to join. It’s its own little island. am on Tildes a lot and really like it.
Isn’t the founder of Tildes a former Reddit admin with a pretty well-known account? Or am I remembering that wrong?
Kbin is a different software than Lemmy, although similar.
It has only been around a few months (unlike lemmy that has years in development).It offers what seems to me a more centralized view of the fediverse, with federation to lemmy servers and mastodon servers as well.
It has access to the microblogging feature, that is like sending a toot from mastodon.
I’ve found it to be a more familiar experience to Reddit, and honestly, I prefer it over lemmy.
Due to it being so new, it has many missing features lemmy might have, like mobile apps (the API is still not public, and it’s being worked on).
HOWEVER, Kbin has a great community backing it up.
I’m currently posting this from the amazing Artemis beta app for Kbin, the first of its kind.
This is due to the incredible job @Hariette has done!!
imgur
I forgot about that…been a while old friend.
Edit: HOLY FUCKNUGGETS BATMAN! It’s still alive and well?!
I didn’t delete anything, because there’s quite a bit of programming & tech advice. I always knew reddit was profiting off my contribution, everybody should have known that from the beginning.
I’ll stop contributing, but I don’t like how much useful information has gone dark or otherwise suddenly just been lost. I wouldn’t burn a library down because they started charging exorbitant late fees, I would just stop going there.
Why I left mine intact. The Reddit “library,” as it were, remains one of the largest and most significant public goods online. I think that’s more important than burning my contributions in the hopes that Reddit management will do a 180. I also pinned a post advertising kbin/lemmy and Squabbles on my profile.
I’m certainly no longer participating, however, and I don’t think Reddit’s built to survive only on visitors from Google.
Tech/programming stuff is exactly why I did nuke mine. Going isn’t as meaningful if you leave a bunch of value behind when you do. While I’m here for entertainment now, I’m often spending my reddit time during work hours on vendor-hosted support forums, stackexchange, etc. now.
Gradually, that library will be relocated to other places. Instead of just not going, I think it’s better to take away others’ reasons for going too, give them reason to seek out better libraries.
Good thing is that the content is not lost for those that know to surf the web. But those locations don’t help reddit at all (main one is the wayback machine from archive.org and then there is a raw datadump of anyhting up to march 2023 as JSON)
I didn’t delete my account, but I did wipe out my post history.
I keep my account active because I’ve already found a couple of instances where reddit restored my posts in particular sub reddits ands I had to delete them again.
I wish I had gone with this route, but I honestly didn’t foresee the possibility that admin might restore what’s been deleted or edited.
I had no intention of ever using the account to add content in the future, but in retrospect it would have been better to keep it in a dormant state.
If I deleted my account I would never again get that special feeling of conducting a websearch to solve some problem and finding a hit from a person who looks like they are having exactly the same issue as me, only to find it was me posting 2 years ago and there are no useful responses.
Makes me wonder how identifiable I am by my “accent” online… I must phrase things in unusual ways. And I spend a lot of time trying to solve problems that are either unsolvable or over my head…
I always find this situation crushing, demoralizing and very funny and until lemmy has better search indexing I don’t want to give it up.
Also I wrote things I think were useful too. But I don’t stumble no them.
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Same here, I just stopped using it. I never had the urge to burn the place down.
Not that erasing my paltry contributions over the years will probably have made that much difference but who knows if it helps someone in a future Google search that’s a good thing.
Yeah- there is so much information that is more detailed and accurate to specific situations in almost every area that would be lost to the future.
And you literally never know what weird take on a current situation, or what seemingly small detail of information about a field of knowledge might be important to people, historians, etc., in the future. So much of our knowledge is in our inherent understanding of how the world is right now, that we tend to assume that that knowledge will always be there and available, but that’s not necessarily the case.
Anyway. I get deleting, or even removing maybe some of the more frivolous content if possible, (“This” “So much this” somes to mind lol) but I think it’s ok to preserve that history.
No.
Nope, good riddance.
Zero regrets. So far the content has been better and people have been nicer, the experience on Lemmy app I use is very similar to the 3rd party Reddit app I was using, and the official Reddit app is so much worse than both of them that I am not at all tempted to use it.
Ngl I miss all the niche communities from reddit that actually had content. Like there’s nothing for The West Wing or The Wire on the lemmybin. Last hype shit for Starfield on the largest Starfield Magazine was like 3 days ago.
Not that I really need or get that much out of that content but it’s shit I like to talk about. And sure I can create the communities or post the content, but it’s like yelling into an abyss right now.
That’ll change as more people join, of course, it’s just a part I miss.
I’ve joined a ton of new discords in the past few weeks. they’re keeping me together until the threadiverse takes off.
Not even a little bit and I was on Reddit since like 2011
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I do feel like I recognize people here more probably because of the avatars. I see you around a lot, and I recognize Nepenthe, catch 42, and otomechan based on their avatars.
Funnily enough I always think you’re Ernest for half a second before I realize I’ve done it again.
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@be_excellent_to_each_other I follow you now :) +1 karma hhehe
Aw thanks!
No regerts…not even one letter.
Seriously, I deleted my posts and comments by my cake day (June 26th), and deleted my account on June 29th. Good riddance.
I had a ten-year-old account that had accumulated a modest amount of karma (34000?) over the years, and had no regrets editing and deleting all the posts (roughly 2700 of them).
I’d contributed in a number of niche subreddits and felt disgusted by the greed that Reddit was showing. More than anything the disgust that they would be profiting off my information was what pushed me to do the editing/deleting.
And since then, I realise I haven’t really missed anything.
Caveat: I was never really bound by my karma score anyway, though, and regularly fact-checked people I knew would not listen just to “spend” my karma anyway.
Reddit is dead to me. It was fun while it lasted, but it’s now in the past. Kbin is where I’ll be going forward.
I didn’t delete my account, but I am never going back. I am done creating “free” content for reddit. Hope it ends up like Twitter.
I still have an account (to make sure things stay deleted) but I jumped ship three weeks ago. No regrets.
Same here. Instead of deleting comments though, I overwrote them with some random nonsense kids poem. Any little thing I can do to screw up their inevitable monetization as a dataset for LLMs.
No regrets.
I haven’t, this time. But I don’t use it. I have been on Reddit exactly five times since the protests began and only two of those were on purpose. The others were by clicking links from here that I didn’t realize went there. The two that were on purpose were related to doing a data request and checking on it.
I have deleted a long standing account before and didn’t regret it. I just switched to an alt. My current account participated in some long-tail mental health support, some of my comments and posts get responded to months/years later thanking me for help. I am not so petty that I would remove content that may actual help someone.
My current account participated in some long-tail mental health support, some of my comments and posts get responded to months/years later thanking me for help. I am not so petty that I would remove content that may actual help someone.
You’re a good person - thank you.
I still have an account there, though I’m not using it much and am considering my options for data takeout and deletion. It feels pretty different to me, though, honestly. I think seeing it as though “things are dying down” is short-sighted. With the mod teams wiped, BotDefense gone, and so forth, I don’t think things are going to stay “back to normal” for long, even if you think they’re there at the moment, which I kinda don’t.
That said, I’m not at all certain the fediverse can take its place. It’ll depend a lot on how many folks start to use it. It’s an uphill battle.
But Reddit, well, I expect it to head downhill pretty badly.
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Kinda comes with being on /m/redditmigration, no?