User visits and time spent on the social media platform normalize after traffic to Reddit briefly dipped last week during the blackout, according to SimilarWeb.
A lot of sentiment seems to suggest that for Lemmy or the fediverse to succeed Reddit has to fail.
I don't get that opinion at all. Reddit had become overwhelming bloated. A popular thread would have thousands of comments. Most of which would be near identical. Only the most up voted would ever be read and typically they had to have been commented while the thread was new.
The internet is vast, there is plenty of room for multiple social media to exist.
If you dislike what reddit has become then ignore it. If you still wish to use it then you can do so side by side with using Lemmy.
Yeah, I'd rather have a thread with a dozen high quality comments than hundreds of bot reposts/low quality buzzwords. I do hope that Lemmy sustains enough activity to have those nice, small conversations though.
I don't WANT Lemmy to replace Reddit. I hope Reddit continues to serve as a containment board for all the morons who flooded into it over the past few years and share views like "most people use the redesign, its fine" and "Reddit is a company that needs to make money". Let Reddit continue to show them the same 10 /r/funny reposts over and over again while the good part of Reddit's community moves here and recreates the quality community we enjoyed pre 2016.