Plenty of redditors are here, reddit did originally start with a good crowd. I myself moved during the great fuckery of 2023. However i believe that a lot of the low-effort redditors (or however you would describe them) you are reffing to would find lemmy just that extra step too difficult/inconvenient to get into and wont take it up.
I don't understand this sentiment. Don't you want Lemmy to grow and overtake the big platforms? If there's specific people or instances you don't like, you could block them. I see no reason to gatekeep Lemmy. I say this as an ex-redditer.
When comments are enabled on free-form ads, there's an increase in community engagement, Reddit claimed, without indicating whether that increase was positive or not.
I remember a long time ago, like maybe a decade or more, the regular we-can-see-they're-ads ads on Reddit could have comments enabled if the ad buyer wanted. I remember jumping in on a few of them and they actually weren't bad, at least in the ones I went into (a biased sample to be sure). If the ads weren't obnoxious or misleading I could see it going not too badly.
At some point adblock got good enough that I stopped seeing ads on Reddit any more, though, so I don't know when they stopped that practice.
Ahead of the Reddit IPO, I'm finally done purging most of my Reddit posting history and subtly modifying the rest to poison whatever AI is trained on it.
I have no doubt Reddit didn't really delete any of the posts I deleted, but I am hoping the poisoned information will find its way verbatim to an AI's training set.
With all this money they'll raise from the IPO, maybe Reddit will finally be profitable! It's definitely not a way for investors to unload their turds on the public.
The social media monster pointed to companies already trialing free-form ads, which include Just Eat Takeaway, Kraft Heinz, and Leica, all of which found the format capable of "driving upper funnel results."
Actually, I'd really like to see a screenshot of these Leica ads if anyone comes across one.