Excerpt:

Most major subreddits show a decrease of between 50 and 90 percent in average daily posts and comments, when compared to a year ago. This suggests the problem is way fewer users, not the same number of users browsing less. The huge and universal dropoff also suggests that people left, either because of the changes or the protests, and they aren’t coming back.

  • AngryCommieKender@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I wouldn’t be surprised to find out that the vast majority of “users” either came to Lemmy, Kbin, or Mastodon. There were a surprisingly small amount of users that weren’t bots, and were content generators, either in OC, or comments.

    I suspect many, if not most, of the bots got turned off, only to be replaced by enshittified bots. It’s way too obvious who’s a bot on Reddit now. Prior to the migration, it was much more difficult to identify a bot over there.

    • cantstopthesignal@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      That article measured the drop off by comment volume. Going by the 90-9-1 heuristic, the 10% of the really active “power users” left. Also judging by the fact that a dogshit repost sub like mademesmile is what’s hitting top of reddit consistently now indicates to me that the 1% of content creators have also peaced out. I see quite a lot of original content on lemmy. Kinda feels like reddit 2012ish levels of content. Not completely endless, but enough to take a good long shit.

      • isdfoa@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Yeah I’ve been kind of browsing both reddit and Lemmy for awhile, but over time in getting super tired of the constant boring/obvious AITAH and just teenage relationship advice spam that floods the frontpage. Definitely has made me open reddit less, and really just for specific communities I can’t find elsewhere.