Hey all,
Still occasionally dipping into Reddit but am finding myself gradually transitioning to Lemmy (shoutout to Memmy!). I was wondering if anyone here knows, what has reddit traffic been like these last few months? Is it declining or holding strong?
Thanks
The bigger subs are easily migrated to Lemmy with enough users to produce regular content. The smaller communities here are extremely deserted as the smaller userbase of Lemmy seems to hit those the hardest - also the federated nature making it harder for users to connect groups with similar topics together and select one as the main one
One possible exception to that, at least so far, seems to be r/nfl. It’s a behemoth on Reddit, but it seems like few made the jump to the fediverse, sadly.
People sell accounts but that’s a lie or a scam. No one offers that much. I got offered $200 for a 12 year old (at the time) account with 150k karma and mod of a small but not tiny sub.
There was a shit ton of gpt model bots even when I was using it and they weren't interested in doing anything about it so safe to say it's only getting worse
Source, go to reddit and read the comments of a top post of the day in a default sub.
About half the comments are copy paste or literally generated by a chatbot. I know people there behave like NPCs but thats a new low. I think The Verge made a Article about it as well.
I don't think there's going to be a good way to know. Semrush is showing a relatively steady decline since January 2023, but I don't trust third-party tools for that. And I doubt that Reddit would make its first-party analytic data public if it looks bad, so in that case the default move is to either cherrypick or create a metric that appears favorable, a la Elon Musk's brand new Twitter metric of median picoseconds of verified user screen time per albatross fart or whatever.
From a qualitative standpoint, both the content and general vibe seem markedly worse than a month or two ago. It's made it easy to stop using it as my default online platform.
But in any case, I don't think it's worth it to get too invested in either its success or failure.
I think it depends a lot on the sub, some of the niche communities with fewer subs just don't give a crap about reddit politics. And honestly, if you're just a casual web user with adblock checking in every couple of days, why should you
/r/anime seems to be holding for now. It's really difficult when the bulk of "content" a lot of people are interested in are weekly mass discussions and shitposting.
I sometimes go there to see the drama and share Bluesky invites.
I noticed some unusual and small subreddits in /r/all a couple of times and some once extremely popular subs like /r/awww and /r/funny seem to lost a lot of engagement.
Decline of quality and quantity of traffic in niche subs over several years is very obvious. As to /r/all I never cared about that. Perhaps advertisers and prospective shareholders do.