A little maybe, but not much.
I’ve seen people say they left reddit to join Lemmy because of the toxic users. To each their own, but I personally think Lemmings aren’t much better. Some people over here can’t understand that sensitive questions can be asked without bad intent. People are way too defensive about their opinions.
It is disappointing, but it’s the better option.


I don’t really know how a Reddit-like alternative would have to present and function to you in order for you to not consider it compromised in such a way.
I don’t even know precisely what you mean by “boxxed” in this context.
That’s the problem. You don’t know. To me it is obvious. But to you everything is fine so why change it. Lemmy shouldn’t be a reddit like alternative.
I see this place as one of the last spaces for leftist. If this fails it’s kind of over for the left.
But let me ask, are you still on reddit? If you left, what made you leave.
I mean structurally. I’m still not sure what you’re getting at here.
And I never said the Threadiverse is perfect (I’m not using Lemmy by the way).
I still use Reddit. It has the audience for many niches topics that the Threadiverse simply doesn’t have.
So structurally I don’t have an answer other than I know that what reddit became is a cancer. Structurally lemmy should find ways to counter commercialization
. One way is to avoid boxes. Communities should be more random and chaotic.
I also would push that mods should take a back seat and give back control to communities to upvote and downvotes content they do not want to see.
Recreate what was fun about the internet before the facebook’s and Instagram came. It should be pro community but hostile to capitalization.
By design it already has done this via having no specific singular owner being able to control it.
I feel like this up to community owners. You can’t make people run communities how they don’t want to to bring about a specific vibe you want.
This has the potential to make many communities complete rubbish. I will use a Reddit example. Take r/metal. Without any moderation, the community would be nothing but nothing but posts of Black Sabbath, Judas Priest, Iron Maiden, Megadeth, Metallica, Slayer, etc forever. Because people just upvote music they already know, all the highly popular artists are always upvoted by people who pass by the subreddit. The moderators, in conjunction with the community implemented a popular artist blacklist (voted on in threads and updated every quarter) to stop that and provide much better coverage for lesser-known bands making it a much more valuable, less low-effort community. That’s just one example I can immediately appeal to here.
Without curation, many communities would degrade over time and become slop.