this post was submitted on 17 Jun 2023
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Canada

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submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by grte to c/canada
 

I don't have any fancy graphs to show the community's growth, but I thought it was worth noting this milestone. The largest individual community on lemmy.ca and the largest national community on lemmy as a whole that I can see. Discuss.

[Edit] A Graph

Credit to our gracious host, @[email protected]

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[โ€“] grte 26 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) (10 children)

When the reddit blackout was at it's height lemmy got a huge influx of users but I think a lot of people had some misapprehensions about how lemmy would grow as a result of that. A lot of people seemed to think there was going to be some huge exodus where half of reddit said, "fuck you, I'm out!" but the reality was the vast majority of people were participating in a temporary protest and the desire of their heart was simply for reddit to go back to the way that it was. But that doesn't mean it's for nothing.

I conceive of what happened as the sowing of seeds. Some people's attention was brought to this platform and we have to water those seeds with content, and give people the opportunity to give and receive interaction. Let people comment, and have their comments commented to in turn. And when enough of that is happening we can harvest that thing that we're all really looking for in all this: Community. And if we can do that, when the next set of bad moves from reddit drives the next wave of people to look for something else (third party apps ending at the end of the month, surely old reddit soon after that), we'll have created something organic for people to glom onto and really get the ball rolling. Something I think was missing in the first round of reddit refugees.

[โ€“] [email protected] 9 points 2 years ago (2 children)

I've been waiting for over a year now for people to find and populate Lemmy. To give it a big enough influx of users to make it viable as a space.

That's honestly all I about out of this now. That enough people are interested in a new social experiment that is about community ownership and operation.

Reddit LARPed at that as they tricked people who cared about topics to work for them for free, but this is the real deal. And it doesn't need 50 million people to succeed.

It probably only needs 5 thousand. Everything can grow from there. With 50,000 or 100,000, it can flourish. That number of people will secure strong long term growth for the whole endeavour.

I don't need Reddit to disappear. As far as I'm concerned, it will be dead the moment it goes public. It'll stop having the potential to be what it was for people, and it will be reborn as something new. But in ita death, it will have breathed more life into the Fediverse, and for that I am glad.

[โ€“] Iamgroot 3 points 2 years ago

Personally this is me and Pixelfed right now. Iโ€™m slowly figuring out Lemmy/Kbin, Iโ€™ve been on mastodon for a few years now.

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