this post was submitted on 22 Aug 2023
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Fediverse

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It is probably due to a number of people stopping using their alts after some instance hopping.

Also a few people who came to see how it was, and weren't attracted enough to become regular visitors.

Curious to see at which number we'll stabilize.

Next peak will probably happen after either major features release (e.g. exhaustive mod tools allowing reluctant communities to move from Reddit) or the next Reddit fuck up (e.g. removing old.reddit)

Stats on each server: https://lemmy.fediverse.observer/list

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[–] Lucia@eviltoast.org 18 points 1 year ago (2 children)

When there's too much people on the social media site, it becomes noisy and unfriendly. I can't remember any subreddit with more than 20k users being any good.

Quality > quantity

[–] hitmyspot@aussie.zone 16 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Yes, but larger variety of active communities is better overall.

[–] Lucia@eviltoast.org 4 points 1 year ago

True, but it will be better overall with a small growth, not what we saw during reddit exodus. And this drop is just a logical end of this rapid migration, and now we'll see a slow but stable growth in Lemmy usage.

[–] EssentialCoffee@midwest.social 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Depends. My main community on Reddit was effectively a link aggregate for a niche hobby that's well over a million subscribers at this point. And when the reddit blackout happened, it became extremely clear that there isn't another community out there that aggregates just as much content as they have there.

Lemmy just doesn't have the tools in terms of tagging and wiki to be able to replace what they've got yet.

[–] Lucia@eviltoast.org 1 points 1 year ago

Tags would be so good for Lemmy actually. Instead of creating new extremely specialized community we could use tags to help those who want this kind of content find it in a less focused community, preventing segregation of small Lemmy user base. And when certain tag gets enough traction we would create a community for it.

Instead we have sorting mechanisms that actively punish small communities and big communities mostly driven by news (e.g. c/technology).