this post was submitted on 18 Sep 2023
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Small communities are still meaningful to community members. Cutting off useless appendages doesn't make a platform worse because "less users," that's a "quantity > quality" mindset which has been proven demonstrably untrue by all of the large social media brands that currently exist
Arguably a "meaningless presence on the web" is a good thing, because it doesn't incentivize people to join who are just in it for the memes and shitposts but don't give a damn about the community.
Yet those platform thrive and grow, including Reddit white Lemmy is what it is.
Yes, until you've to go into Reddit because there's no content and/or people here that might reply to you.
Yes because they've focused more on quantity than quality.
I rest my case
Idk if we're talking about the same platform, but the reddit I was on for years had 2 major kinds of communities:
Loud shouting matches with tons of no-effort content drowning out the quality discussions, where people with the worst opinion or stalest jokes struggle to be top comment
Small communities that get a handful of new posts per week, where the community is engaging but relatively inactive.
Now these two aren't exactly mutually exclusive, so there were small dogshit subs and >100k subs that were enjoyable (as long as you avoided the comments).
What I realized was that the smaller communities weren't generally better because the people were a different breed, but—because of the slow pace and small size—people didn't feel driven to treat it like a popularity contest; those who did would get frustrated and act out until they were kicked or blocked by the majority. It wasn't all sunshine and rainbows, but it was still better than the large communities.
I've blocked !memes@lemmy.ml, which means I'm limited to the second kind of communities here.