Said more directly: r/popular sucks, and we’re moving away from it, and towards better, more relevant and personalized feeds.
I hate how the highlighted part is going to be a decent thing at best or a fucking horrible thing at worst.
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Said more directly: r/popular sucks, and we’re moving away from it, and towards better, more relevant and personalized feeds.
I hate how the highlighted part is going to be a decent thing at best or a fucking horrible thing at worst.
Sectioning off groups of people into their own echo chambers has been the digital divide-and-conquer M.O. for a while now. This is a bad thing. Remember how it would feel when a post in your favorite niche sub hit /all? That kind of injection of nonmembers into the discussion is a good thing.
Honestly wondering: why are you on the fediverse if you prefer centralized social media?
Personally, because they killed my app. I wish Lemmy had the breadth of content and discussion offered by Reddit, but at least I can use a UI that doesn't make my eyes bleed.
Remember how it would feel when a post in your favorite niche sub hit /all?
I'm from the anime community. It was not a good thing when it happened around a decade ago lol. It got so bad that the /r/anime mods voluntarily hid us from /r/all for a few years before eventually opening up again.
I also play niche gacha games with fan service, and the general consensus on having outsiders come in is negative. Mainly because the outsiders usually can't tolerate fan service and the developers have to make the game tamer.
But I get what you mean, though. Echo chambers are bad for political-related communities. It's exactly what lead to our current political climate.
you have been banned from /r/politics for this post
/r/popular sucks so we're going to feed you infinite slop forever like facebook
nice
It's hard to control the zeitgeist when the zeitgeist will do what it wants. I 100% understand why they got rid of it.
116 million visits per day, minus all the bots and other garbage, is... half that number as real, actual visitors? Less than half?
Greedy pig boy oinks a lot
Are they going to force the mod limits the same way they force sitewide bans? Because those have long been shit and are easily bypassed.
The nice thing with reddit was that popular would surface communities I didn't know about, and if it was something I hated, I could block it from my feed :(
our aim is to keep Reddit the most human place on the internet
Every time this guy posts or speaks publicly he has to mention the "human" aspect of reddit. No idea why. 🙄
This is because popular was too liberal lol, the views tend to be eat the rich and anti trump still
this is so conservatives dont see liberal sht on their feed and stay lol
Rare W for Spez, he's absolutely right and this is a very smart move for the platform as it exists as an ecosystem.
I still strongly believe the federated/nonprofit model (Piefed/Lemmy/Mbin) is superior and have no plans on going back to Reddit, but presenting Reddit the platform as a collection of communities and not one homogeneous content feed is a genuinely positive move and sets them apart from other platforms.
Another Royal Proclamation from King Steven the Turd.
What an idiot. Spez nuked his own website multiple times, the API stuff was just the last straw for many. LLM Bots, powertripping mods, astroturfing politicos, and brainbroken libs coalesced in a perfect tsunami of shit and killed whatever utility that website had in the past.