Good hints, but these events likely were not very relevant.
While Lemmy gained almost 200,000 new users in the last two days, the active users increased by less than 3,000, just about the same as pretty much every two-day period recently. So pretty much all of those new users are inactive. That’s not hordes of Redditors coming over and exploring Lemmy, that’s hordes of bot and sleeper accounts being created.
Well, for Lemmy 1 of 5 users was active right before the jump, and when the 219’519 new users (*) came, the active user count only increased by 2,873, so 1 of 74 new users was active.
When hundreds of thousands of users are so interested in a new platform that they storm it in a few hours, wouldn’t you expect them to initially engage a lot, rather than basically all being inactive from the start? Especially if they are early adopters, coming just days after most of the other users which turn out to be pretty active?
(*: Apparently the latest numbers from fediverse.observer are live or updated multiple times a day, so it’s again some 20,000 new users since my earlier post which already had different numbers than the OP.)
Some of the big things that happened in the past 24h or so:
Also r/ModCoord has started recommending moderators to move their communities to other platforms, like Lemmy.
Good hints, but these events likely were not very relevant.
While Lemmy gained almost 200,000 new users in the last two days, the active users increased by less than 3,000, just about the same as pretty much every two-day period recently. So pretty much all of those new users are inactive. That’s not hordes of Redditors coming over and exploring Lemmy, that’s hordes of bot and sleeper accounts being created.
https://lemmy.fediverse.observer/dailystats
I’m pretty sure that’s just how social media works. Only 1-3% are active users, while the rest of it are lurkers.
Well, for Lemmy 1 of 5 users was active right before the jump, and when the 219’519 new users (*) came, the active user count only increased by 2,873, so 1 of 74 new users was active.
When hundreds of thousands of users are so interested in a new platform that they storm it in a few hours, wouldn’t you expect them to initially engage a lot, rather than basically all being inactive from the start? Especially if they are early adopters, coming just days after most of the other users which turn out to be pretty active?
(*: Apparently the latest numbers from fediverse.observer are live or updated multiple times a day, so it’s again some 20,000 new users since my earlier post which already had different numbers than the OP.)
Do you have a link to the new post by the Apollo dev?
Here‘s a link where someone copied the post to kbin. There‘s also a link to reddit