Most of the posts that are frequently featured in the homepage are about social problems or styles of life common to that country (or most first world countries), and even limit to only United-Statesian media discussion. They do not appeal to someone like me, who has different thoughts, different people, different problems. It’s hard to find something relatable in (most) non-local communities, because it’s just about this style of culture. It doesn’t helps with the poor website discorverability, making me limited to these same repetitive and unfunny posts.
Is my opinion popular or impopular? Read the sidebar, and respectfully discuss your ideas instead of hiding cowardly.
It’s too unpopular for the majority here to resist down voting as they should if they respected the rule. As a French trying to provide a different point or view sometimes, I agree. Not only it’s a vast majority of USA, but also a specific political quarter of it.
Despite what some say here, even motivated minority posters can’t compensate for the crushing statistic, and the total mass is too small to have lively niche communities like on Reddit.
I don’t see any solution for now, apart some really major new fuck ups by Reddit that would trigger a bigger exodus.
I also feel like non-English communities just do their things on their own (feddit.org or jlai.lu are good examples), which increases even further the proportion of US users on the generic English-speaking communities.
I think it’s good to have them doing their own things, but it is just not big enough to be as entertaining and wide-covering as Reddit. j’ai.lu feels more like a forum with 50 active members that you would check once a week.
@Camus @oce
I didn’t completely understand the last part. What do you mean by that ?
https://jlai.lu/post/13223574/11469914
@oce
Thank
In truth i don’t see why it increased the proportion of US user. In fact Reddit wasn’t popular outside US. And US if i recall correctly is one of the biggest internet country.
And when the migration started due to spez’s decision to milk Reddit and its users’s data, most of users stayed in Reddit and smaller commuties have a hard time to attract those Redditors since our activity is low.
Futhermore i follow most of jlai.lu active user through iceshrimp, my tab called “Lemmy” is in english.
So the final result isn’t surprising. 😅
I’m not following the proportion point, but about non-US on reddit, r/france has 2.1 M readers and r/de has 2.7 M readers. They are very active, it completely dwarves anything on Lemmy. Any national subject is going to be discussed there. I am not using those by activism, but I can’t blame the average person to prefer those vastly more active places.
Look at the daily posts on !melbourne@aussie.zone. They have several hundreds of comments every day, because the mods of /r/Melbourne supported the migration to Lemmy.
!ich_iel@feddit.org is kind of similar in that space, they had an official post to move to feddit a year ago: https://old.reddit.com/r/ich_iel/comments/14d65o7/öffentliche_dienstmeldung_änderung_der/
Meanwhile the mods of /r/France just removed every post mentioning Jlai.lu as it was “a social network”.
Shaking my head.
@oce
I’m not sure if they really have 2.1M readers on Reddit. I don’t trust those numbers due to bots, inative accounts…
And if Lemmy was really connected to the fediverse we wouldn’t have 1K users but lot more.
Even if we can’t trust those numbers, you can just check their frontages and see the number of posts and comments per day, it’s much more active.
How could it be more connected?