What are some Redditisms that Lemmy needs to avoid?

https://lemmy.world/post/1354764

What are some Redditisms that Lemmy needs to avoid? - LemmyWorld

For example, people on Reddit asking redundant questions and give equally redundant or unhelpful answers. Whenever every ‘What’s the worst show you’ve seen?’ is asked, you’ll get 10,000 “Kardashians” answers, which is just easy karma farming. If someone posts in a community that’s geared for something like opinions, but someone elects to just go on a full scale rant instead.

Reposting.
Reposting
Slightly altering a report to make it seem new
Making same joke but worse
And my cutting tool that consists of a heavy edged head fixed to a handle with the edge parallel to the handle
Have an upvote and absolutely meaningless award in form of an icon that I need to pay for first. Kind sir.
Low-effort repetitive comment chains too, preferably.
Long comment chains of song lyrics where each comment adds another line. They can fuck right off.
Especially the ones where they put in juuuuuust enough effort to make it less funny.
I do enjoy a good pun thread, though.

There’s two kinds of resposting:

“honest” resposting that happens when the OP hasn’t seen his submission previously posted.

karma-whore resposting that happens when someone wants to get those sweet internet points.

Without karma the second one may not be a problem at all ¯\(ツ)

I’ve gotten pegged by people when I reposted something I knew very well, hadn’t been posted within a year’s timeframe. Like, what’s the problem with that? It hasn’t been seen in so long so yeah it’ll be reposted.

Unlike with your second scenario, I’ve seen posts crop up within the same day and they’re all gratified and praised like as if people hadn’t seen them before when their short attention spans fail to tell them that they did see it before very recently.

Could’ve been different people. This happened all the time with me seeing something for the first time in my life, while comments were full of complaints of it being reposted once a week.

Karma-whoring is especially bad when it’s just all bots doing it. There were many instances where even comments on karma posts were bot generated. Upvotes were much likely bot generated too.

Destroys the human element.

Also, reposting is particularly bad for people who use the platform a lot. However, that doesn’t account for everyone, so not only may the poster not realize it’s a repost, but it also might get to people who have never seen it. I know that’s happened to me a lot.

Going to a sub of strictly like minded people and posting popular opinions for karma.

“Thanks for the gold” and other “Edit: this blew up” type bullshit.

Any time someone says “obligatory [anything]” I want to scream.

I get the others, but why that last one?

Think of it like this. When humans talk to humans, is any joke ever obligatory? It’s “that’s what she said” any time anything vaguely prurient gets mentioned.

Now imagine if they said “I’m obligated to tell you that’s what she said.” Do you see how they’ve added a tragic undercut to a comment that already wasn’t funny?

People should not do this.

To be frank, I still don't get it, but I also hardly qualify as a human to begin with.
It’s overrated, you’re doing great

This

/s

Why is posting this ironically any better than posting it unironically?
It’s one of the thing I don’t miss. Using it the “correct way” is supposed to hurt your eyes. /s for the people who don’t get it.

I used to use /s all the time over at Reddit - especially in political discussions. If I posted sarcastically “advocating” for something, I didn’t want people to misread the post and think I seriously supported that thing.

Normally, I could trust that people would pick up on the sarcasm, but it’s hard over text and there were people actually advocating for the horrible stuff. I didn’t want to be mistaken for one of them, so I’d add a /s. It definitely ruined the joke, but I’d rather do that than have someone think I was racist/sexist/bigoted/etc.

Sometimes the /s is necessary. It’s difficult to convey sarcasm in writing.

That’s the fate of, ironically, a subreddit called UNPOPULARopinions.

“Beyonce is overrated!” - just throw them the lifetime achievement award for “unpopular”. /s

Because of user karma. Even a fake incentive to say things that everyone likes beyond normal social pressure creates a bunch of people who eagerly say inane shit to get moar doots.
Between that, and just hate, I stayed on that sub for maybe a couple of hours.

Unpopular opinion: [incredibly popular opinion]

+67,000 upvotes

Oh God I hope award speech edits don’t make it over here
Once we have critical mass, I think we can have meaningful discussions. However, if 300 million threads users become regulars in these instances, expect the worst of redditism. Every comment will be memes or jokes.
I would say circlejerking. The Bean meme was very Reddit like, but maybe it is necessary to build an online community to have posts like that?
I kind of enjoy the circlejerking to an extent. It’s like watching fads come and go in real time, and I like seeing these dumb memes evolve over a week or two before disappearing
Circlejerking is incredibly fucking stupid, but I eat up stupid humour like candy so I personally support it. As long as serious/discussion spaces don't get contaminated, ofc
The bean thing felt very cringey and forced imo
I’m glad that’s over. I would hate it when whole subreddits would get taken over with an inside joke for days at a time.
Oh, we aren’t getting away from that here.

maybe it is necessary to build an online community to have posts like that?

I’m pretty sure it is, but that bean meme was a little bit too much. On the other hand I can understand how people on this new platform are craving the feeling of community that memes and insider jokes evoke.

Power moderators. There is no justifiable reason for one person to own hundreds of major subs.
The problem there is finding someone else to do the work for free.

If someone is a mod of more than a handful of forums/subs/mags/whatever I kind of doubt they're able to dedicate enough time to mod properly anyway.

It just became a thing to collect to show you were part of the "in" crowd.

The only justification I could think of is someone providing CSS services to different subs. Instead of modding/demodding for every issue, they just stay on and work as needed.

Questions like “When you’re sexing some sexy sex, how many sex do you sex?”

Let’s keep the 14 y/o horniness out of here.

Jesus, yes. I can’t tell you how many subreddits got swamped with high-school leveled questions about sex.

Especially in TooAfraidToAsk, which is supposed to be about questions that’d normally be about trying to ask taboo things to get a discussion. But no, you’ll come across questions like “if there is no porn to look at, what do you look at instead while jerking off in the shower?”. Like, besides trolls, who the hell comes up with some questions like that? Let’s not forget the abundance of people, showcasing the lack of sexual education, asking if they’d HPV by doing this or HIV by doing that.

I feel bad because clearly these poorly educated teenagers need answers to these questions. But it really drags down the level of discourse.

And not just regarding sex, but any other "oh you're obviously 14" takes.

Makes you wonder if the loads of stupid sex questions has anything to do with the lack of proper sex education in schools.

I don’t know, man.

Teenagers are going to be horny no matter the level of education. I just think it’s exciting for them to have “real” people answering their questions, a distinctly different experience than asking the teacher in sex-ed, more private too.

Some of them were from perpetually horny adults like myself but we usually self-quarantined at r/askredditafterdark