It reminds me how Imgur is often discussing images that were uploaded for Reddit and OP will never know about all the comments.
The main thing driving my enjoyment of Lemmy is the people and real responses. Having bots just copy and paste existing posts from Reddit with no human behind the post isn’t driving engagement. I haven’t seen a single reddit repost by a bot get a single comment or community interaction at all.
I’m against it, it feels like a garbage in garbage out type of situation.
There’s a lemmy community I used to be subbed to with a mod that decided to grab every recent and new post from /r/ and repost here. No comments on 4 of 5 posts, and one or two on the remaining 1 of 5. New posts every 3 to 5 minutes. Many readers thought it was a bot, and on a meta post in the sub, a different mod said they aren’t a bot, they’re doing a great job, and we should block the mod.
Did that and unsubbed. Now my “new” feed isn’t full of reposted, zero-engagement posts.
I’m not in favor of it at all. If a human user wants to link to something interesting/relevant, fine, but I’m not excited about bots spamming links.
That bot is an absolute menace. Often I come across a thread that would probably interest me, then I see 0 comments and the standard bot message and move on.
It also feels like it is really spamming those threads, which does not help the situation.
Personally, I would love to see it removed.
Highly recommend just blocking the bot you’re referring to.
I don’t like them.
one thing that I’ve noticed the last week when using Lemmy is that content is slowly coming along but the discussions are somewhat lacking.
Reddit offers a shitload of topics and content but the real reason we were there was for the comments and the discussions.
Bots reposting material can be a way to artificially secure the constant flow of topics but we need to throw some gasoline on the discussion bonfire…
I’m hoping it will happen naturally. I am inclined to think those of us who left reddit early are less lurkers than the users who will leave later. That means most of the users who left reddit early in the blackout are the more active users. Still, we need to double down on our activity to get things going here. It reminds me of a message on mastodon when the twitter exodus happened. There was encouragement to comment on toots, even if it was something small, just to make the OPs feel they were being heard/read. We should strive for the same here, specially considering there might be another wave of users coming this way after the 30th.
When 90% of the comments are sarcastic or jokes like Reddit I can’t call that discussion or engaging. It’s noise just like all of the reposts and duplicate content.
I’ve been on kbin (the fediverse) for over a week and I feel the opposite of your sentiment. The content was lacking but discussion is A+. Content is definitely picking up steam now, but I don’t want the fediverse to be a reddit clone.
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Pointless spam. If you’re going to dig content from somewhere, maybe pick someplace we haven’t all already been.
I think it might be okay in the early stages of a community when they’re trying to grow a user base, “build it and they will come” sort of thing. But spamming more content than the community can keep up with is just annoying. I think they should be tweaked to only post a certain number of times per day so there’s a chance to get some meaningful engagement on each thread.
I think the best solution would be to have an API affordance for it. Have some sort of
historical
boolean field that lets you import the content but keeps it from showing up in feeds.That’s way you can move your community’s history over to a new home without drowning out other content
I fucking hate it and I wish it would stop, links to literally anything other than Reddit, if I wanted to open Reddit all the time I would just reinstall Reddit.
Harmful. It’s noise pollution. It dilutes human contribution and makes it harder to engage with other people.
Yeah, at least if it’s everything. I don’t necessarily mind if content from Reddit is being recycled to here, as long as it’s sparingly selected. By a human or maybe by a bot if the content passes through certain thresholds (X amount of upvotes or something, idk).
I say allow it if it can be opted out. Having a ‘repost’ or ‘bot’ tag, and a filter would solve it for me.
But it might be a lot of work to implement.Yeah, I’m guessing it wouldn’t even be priority at this point.
Not a fan, fuckin dislike it immensely tbh.
I’ve left subs that seem to be largely a bot reposting Reddit content. The posts seem to get no comments and it all feels a bit empty and soulless. Plus, if we want to be something other than a straight Reddit clone then copying Reddit posts over here doesn’t seem the way to do it.
I’m worried that people think I’m a bot because I like to post articles and don’t get much discussion usually.
I’m not sourcing them from reddit though.
We’re on to you!!
Yeah, I have that fear so have been throttling back my posting. I wouldn’t worry as the examples I am thinking of are pretty obvious like malelivingspace@lemmit.online. That instance has a community where you can request communities and a bot starts them. At least in this case, there is a bot that just imports the posts from the relevant sub.
I block every repost bot I find. I don’t care about reddit’s content. If I wanted that, I’d go there. Create content for the community here, not just noise. Most bot posts don’t even get any engagement because their posts are soulless.
I hate it. Rather than filling this place up with junk, we should have users post what they want to post.
Doesn’t even have to be original, really; just…no botspam.
Good for this transitional phase.
Problem is, why would people comment on the issue on lemmy, instead of reddit?
@CthulhuDreamer I don’t like it personally. It just gives more traffic to Reddit