I think it’s great that so many people want to build and grow Lemmy, but why are we doing it by copying over Reddit content? It didn’t seem as bad when it was funny pics or memes or whatever, but now I’m seeing discussion threads, which doesn’t make sense to me.
I can kind of see it if a Reddit mod decides to move their forum from there to here, and wants to start with their existing content, but otherwise I’m not sure this is a good thing.
What do you guys think?
I’m personally archiving some of the great content from my community on Reddit because it meant so much to me, and to lose it would be a shame. I think it’s important for us to preserve the foundational content of our communities.
Curious what tooling you’re using. I think they all have the 1000 post limit but I at least found BDFRX easy to use to back up my sub’s 1000 most recent posts and am just looking to host that and link to it in a future community here on lemmy
I am PMing users on Reddit to ask permission to reshare their OC, and then manually posting here once I obtain it. It gives me the chance to give the posts a pass for typos and such, which is nice.
I don’t give a flying fuck.
There could be a few reasons.
- They want to copy over their favorite content.
- They want to try to attract more people to a community by bootstrapping content.
- They are trying to artificially inflate their instance for nefarious reasons.
Personally, I think adding some of your favorite Reddit posts is fine as long as you don’t blindly copy over everything from a subreddit. I have a couple communities that I brought over that I like, but without content, they mean nothing.
Reddit never produced any content. The users did.
Users move. Content moves.
If it was a user who posted content there and decided they’d rather have it here, that would make sense. But this appears to be bots scraping Reddit subs for content and copying big chunks here. I don’t know about you, but I’m not likely to respond to that kind of post. I don’t think it fosters discussion or helps us.
I’m doing it with communities that need a jump start, and it seems to be sparking conversation in those posts. However, I’m not grabbing discussions for them to come over.
[email protected] currently trying to help /c/technology and /c/til
Edit: also trying not to spam, it checks top posts once an hour, and only will post one link an hour to each sub.
You have to jump-start communities. Copying is a simple way to do it.
The importance of jump starting can’t be understated. Most people will go to the community that has content. If a community is empty, a lot of people won’t even start participating in it. Plenty of people who make posts want them to be discussed, so they’re only looking for active communities.
I think I have a bit of a bias against trying to make Lemmy a copy of Reddit, but I also feel like it doesn’t make sense to copy old discussion threads. Someone asked a question on Reddit and got an answer. We don’t need that duplicated here, in my opinion.
Again, i think a mod relocating their community is a different situation.
Although when I see such communities not having any replies to reddit share/RSS/bot on
Lemmy
communities`, work days or a week it starts to feel like that fire 🔥 isn’t starting.Don’t forget that the real migration has not even started, assuming there is going to be one - one week to go for that to begin.
I think it’s a great way to get things started. People coming to check things out and seeing content are more likely to stay and create their own content.
Lots of people like to collect things. When they move, they want to take their collections with them.
And there is so much knowledge deposited in reddit that it would be unwise to let its future on the hands of gold seekers. I wish we had more time for the backups, and that those that overwrote their posts and comments can share that lost info here.
Everything is recycled nothing is new.
This was even true before they even copied it out from Reddit.
It’s a factor that supports getting to critical mass, but should be used in moderation.
Reddit founders incessantly posted stuff from Digg and created fake conversation threads.
Most content driven platforms have the same problem and initial practice due to the chicken-and-egg problem. If you don’t have content, users not gonna come; if users aren’t there, they won’t be submitting content. So to kick start a community, you’d need a group of vocal users contributing a lot of content and interacting with them.
I’m not loving the RSS/Reddit bot posts really, I’m personally blocking a lot of such lemmy-bots.
I’m a fan of people sharing links and starting conversations or showing off an interesting/shiny thing with the communities themselves.
To…maybe be not Reddit for a change. 🤔
Then again I’m an elder Millennial and remember live journal and myspace.
I mean I’m here weening off reddit as well.
Could see the benefit of temporarily posting reddit moderator/pin posts or such. Emphasis on temporary.
But the daily influx of such stuff when I attempt to view All as New is certainly a journey.
I don’t see it as a problem since a lot of people are nuking their Reddit accounts, and I’d guess most of us are Reddit refugees.
Reddit didn;t invent conversation. some of my favorite subreddits were niche for podcasts that I like, and those buttholes are still live. whatever
When googling information i usually end the search with “reddit” as Reddit makes it harder to view without signing in to the app i want to be able to google with the word lemmy instead so having the information here is helpful
But there probably is a instance with Lemmy in its name that has it indexed
Same reason I want more forums like Fedora Discussion, Ask Ubuntu, and Stack Overflow on the Fediverse. I like the Fediverse as a way to see information and have discussion on it. More good content, the better. Without good content, I would never have used Reddit in the first place.
With c/Titanfall, we’re using the lemmit bot to re-post some of the stuff from reddit to lemmy.
We’re curating what exactly makes it to the new community, but it’s a short term way to have some content to get started with.
Long term, I would not want it to continue