The best ad I saw for Reddit (back before the grand Digg migration) was one day, everyone agreed to stop posting direct links to articles and instead post the links to the Reddit discussions for said articles.
Suddenly, one day, the entire Digg feed was links to Reddit.
We should do the same thing (on say 8/1) to give time for the different federated instances to get accustomed to the higher traffic, more activity on the feed, and more people to welcome the future Reddit refuges, just like Redditors once welcomed us during the Digg 4.0 exodus.
It would be funny and I'd love to see it but you KNOW spez and his butthurt bootlicking simps are petty enough to block/ban any link that goes to any address that's associated with a Lemmy instance AND instantly "permanently suspend" any account that participates.
Reddit admins even ejected their favorite agitator powermod, u/awkwardthepanda, for posting a John Oliver picture.
They are truly prepared to burn every bridge.
...
But maybe that's the point. Maybe they should be FORCED to burn every bridge and annihilate themselves in the inferno.
Honestly? If it’s a way to siphon users away from Reddit and towards Lemmy, we all need to look at this sort of thing as an investment. Sure, it gives Reddit some cash up front… but it also siphons away their primary value proposition to advertisers: the user base.
Running subreddit-specific ads pushing lemmy/fediverse-hosted alternative for a couple months will do WONDERS in the long term.
And yes, it’s distasteful to give Steve money, but at the same time, giving him a comparatively small amount of cash now will ultimately end up taking a far, FAR more significant amount of money away from him later, in the form of audience count he can offer to his advertisers.
I don't know, I really don't believe ads can do that much wonders. I mean, apparently they do because otherwise we wouldn't have the whole internet plastered with them, but I personally don't think I've ever actually clicked on an ad in my entire life.
Well you see, people like you and me, who are borderline obsessive about our refusal to interact - or even be presented - with ads, are unfortunately very definitely outliers in terms of user archetypes on the modern internet.
Most sources I've seen claim that 42% of internet users use Adblockers, and the percentage obviously goes up as the age goes down. Considering the average Reddit user's age, the adblocking users might as well be the majority, so if you count in the people who don't block them but don't click on them either I don't think it's going to make that much of an impact.
And honestly I'm not even that obsessive about my ad experience, it's more that they rarely have anything I would be remotely interested about.
Hmm. So how about: "Tired of ads? Reddit wants to show them to you. Come to Lemmy, we are friendly and you are welcome!" I am willing to commit 100 euro if anyone can make that happen.
Choice. If an instance starts adding in ads, people will move to another instance. If they find a way to be invasive enough to be seen by users in other instances, they would probably be defederated.
Choice. If an instance starts adding in ads, people will move to another instance. If they find a way to be invasive enough to be seen by users in other instances, they would probably be defederated.
The choice is the thing, I think. It's what made the whole Reddit thing a bit bizarre for me. Like they could've just passed the ads through the API and used personal API keys in 3rd party apps. Those content to take the ads take them and those who prefer to pay a fee can do so.
"We need to pay for this shit, it's up to you how we do it" is a much easier sell IMO than "you'll use our app and you'll fucking like it"
At the beginning the app I was using held a poll to see whether users would pay a subscription and initially I said I'd pay £4 a month or so but it really was how spez dealt with the situation that pushed me away from the site.
The total contempt shown for the people who make his site for him left me flabbergasted. Ultimately I think it's for the best as I'd never have found lemmy and the fediverse.
The choice is the thing, I think. It's what made the whole Reddit thing a bit bizarre for me. Like they could've just passed the ads through the API and used personal API keys in 3rd party apps. Those content to take the ads take them and those who prefer to pay a fee can do so.
"We need to pay for this shit, it's up to you how we do it" is a much easier sell IMO than "you'll use our app and you'll fucking like it"