are you permanently banned off reddit? or do you just like lemmy more?
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no they just closed the api for 3rd party apps. I wasn't going to use their shitty app. the official app was literally the worst of all of them so this was the only way they were going to get users but fuck that. I don't need reddit.
wrote 7 days ago last edited byTheir app is actually more intrusive, apparently ban wise it would be easier to identify you try other evasion methods that can't be detected easily.
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wrote 7 days ago last edited by
Nowadays, everybody wanna talk like they got somethin' to say
But nothin' comes out when they move their lips
Just a bunch of gibberishAnd motherfuckers act like they forgot about beans
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I don't think I'm banned. I left with the API Exodus. I do like Lemmy more now because of more free speech and control over what information I see
wrote 7 days ago last edited byThey have been banning inactive accounts, apparently some were getting hacked by trolls
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I was on Reddit from mid 2012 to mid 2023, across a few accounts and with a hiatus of a few months here and there. I had been passively looking at less centralized forms of personal interaction on the web, trying to find traditional forums to replace the subs I frequented. Like a lot of people here, the API issues and the news of Reddit courting investors left a bad taste in my mouth.
I deleted my account, but I still lurk on a few subs, and my IT job means I have to dig through reddit posts on a regular basis for troubleshooting purposes.
wrote 7 days ago last edited byWhen reddit went public, and now they want a buyer, they are banning as much accounts as possible to look good to investors, they dint care if the bans were legitimate or not.
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I got a new account after my old one got banned but now I never challenge the echo chamber. I just ban/block obnoxious subs and users to avoid the temptation. I stay mainly for some interest groups there and local subs.
wrote 7 days ago last edited byI heard on modhelp, how they were salivating over the indiscriminate banning of the filters
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Going cold turkey. Bizarrely I like lemmy more as there's less content so I don't scroll as much.
I nuke my accounts pretty regularly for data security so didnt really have any value in my account (none of this "I had 1500 karma coins" or whatever)
wrote 7 days ago last edited byWhat did the karma coins actually do? Never understood that part of Reddit.
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You don't, you wait it out.
wrote 7 days ago last edited byI did that with alternate location and ip, before the pandemic. Now that I don't, I received so much more bans than beforem
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wrote 7 days ago last edited by
If you create multiple accounts they will shadowban you even. More. The best is to wait a while before creating a new one, use different devices, browsers if possible a different IP ,like a cafe or library. The more they catch, you the easier they can ban your newly created accounts faster
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I find it super funny honestly, because I left Reddit because of shit moderation and a gross bias toward liberal posts in the moderation (ironic now). Then I come here to escape, which I'm realizing is a very liberal a platform, and I'm noticing that it wasn't that it was leftist leaning, the people were just insufferable.
I routinely find things in common with people across the aisle here and the content is way more objective.
I never got perma banned, but I was silenced enough to know that it wasn't good for my mental health to stay. Lemmy is great. I think this is a platform where people can actually just meet in the middle and talk. I got banned from Mastadon on my first day, so it was a no go.
But banana bread, at fucking work bro? HELL. YEAH.
wrote 7 days ago last edited byIt's definitely gearing towards right wing alot. Especially with how many of them are pushing pro Russian talking points.
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wrote 7 days ago last edited by
reddit was better simply because it has more people. but it's unusable without api access and alternative apps.
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wrote 7 days ago last edited by
I deleted my own Reddit accounts after They started censoring posts and subreddits.
There was all too many fuckups in the last few years.
- The API scandal
- The wallstreetbets scandal
- Spez and Fuck Reddit
- the Antiwork community scandal
- the Luigi censorship LGBT and EDI
They have no control of that platform their hands are tied. They are sold.
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wrote 7 days ago last edited by
No, I had a reddit account in good standing that was around a decade old, I switched to Lemmy when it became clear that Reddit was being run by the regressive conservative tech world, eventually I also deleted my reddit account as part of a purge of my online identity.
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reddit was better simply because it has more people. but it's unusable without api access and alternative apps.
wrote 7 days ago last edited byIf you are on Android, there are ways around the API thing. I was able to get my favorite Reddit app, RiF (Reddit is Fun) to continue to work after they took away API access.
https://revanced.app/
Can be used with various Apps as it patches them -
wrote 7 days ago last edited by
I like Lemmy since its mostly about Tech but even the small communities over on Reddit can be more engaging then communities over here. I am involved in Trading cards and there just not the same community over here for it
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wrote 7 days ago last edited by
As I mentioned in another reply, there are ways around that limit. I was very happy when i was able to use RiF again
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wrote 7 days ago last edited by
Perma banned from Reddit cause I compared Clarence Thomas to Stephen Candie from Django Unchained.
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wrote 7 days ago last edited by
Still on both but I'm not actively going on Reddit anymore. Only when Lemmy World can't be reached by my Sync app (which has usually more to do with my connection than Lemmy) or when I click links from people. I've refrained from commenting there anymore and will likely wipe it soon enough, after I get around to wiping my Meta posts (can't delete my whole account since I have friends and family still using it, but I definitely want to "hollow it out" if that makes sense).
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wrote 7 days ago last edited by
I had an account on reddit, about five years old until I finally decided to leave it because i spend an ungodly amount of time there. Knowing myself and my habit to flake on self set goals I thought out the ultimate strategy to keep me from coming back: Over a couple of weeks I intentionally posted atrocious stuff on my main and my two alt-accounts to get me permabanned and burn every single bridge.
For now it has successfully stopped me from wasting time there any longer.
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What did the karma coins actually do? Never understood that part of Reddit.
wrote 7 days ago last edited byI'm not sure, I think they were worthless (like, beyond respect from your peers which is naturally bs).
I think they also introduced awards which I know cost real money to buy but bizarrely were valueless to the receipient
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wrote 7 days ago last edited by
I just switched when the API nonsense shat all over the actually good reddit apps, since I primarily used reddit on my phone.
I saw lemmy touted as an alternative and figured why not?