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    • @TexMexBazooka@lemm.eeOP
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      261 year ago

      Just sucks that every new user will have to jump through hoops and block a dozen accounts before Lemmy is useable.

      Not to mention that even opening some of the bot accounts pages to block them crashes the page sometimes because they have so many posts

      • @OddrunAsmundr@lemm.ee
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        181 year ago

        Truthfully I found I have had to block quite a few more communities than just the reddit bots. Everything in the fediverse has required work so far. Worth it imo though.

        • @trailing9@lemmy.ml
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          31 year ago

          Can we have group blocks?

          Let users collaborate on the list of accounts and domains they want to block. E. g. have a special type of channel and every link that is posted and upvoted is blocked.

        • @Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca
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          81 year ago

          Some bots are actually useful; article shorteners for example.

          I don’t want to disable all bots just because of a few bad actors.

    • Came here to say this. As seen in this thread, there are people who seem to want it, so I see nothing wrong with letting them have it. I wonder how hard it would be to implement a blocklist to make this a bit less of a hassle.

    • I’m almost there, still at the internal dialogue of “oh damnit” and mild annoyance stage but haven’t quite gotten to the “do something about it stage”

  • LCP
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    221 year ago

    Things would get really quiet without them.

    Eventually I can see getting rid of them, but for now they’re keeping Lemmy active.

    • @TexMexBazooka@lemm.eeOP
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      101 year ago

      They’re doing the opposite.

      A new user comes to Lemmy and sees nothing but the same posts they saw on Reddit, but now all of them have no comments and almost no upvotes because there’s so much of it posted to such a small environment that everything else gets drowned out.

      After blocking every one of the dogshit bots I see just as many quality posts, by actual users, with actual comments.

    • @ALostInquirer@lemm.ee
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      41 year ago

      Eventually I can see getting rid of them, but for now they’re keeping Lemmy active.

      Do a multitude of automated posts without comments and conversation really count as activity? Before I simply hid bot posts via settings, I’d rarely see any conversations appearing on Reddit reposts. Even now if you look at probably the most prolific bot instance/account behind this, Lemmit.online bot, you can see this for yourself.

      Interesting archival project, I suppose, but it certainly doesn’t seem to generate activity in terms of conversation, besides posts like this.

      • @scubbo@lemmy.ml
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        11 year ago

        Do a multitude of automated posts without comments and conversation really count as activity?

        Yes, absolutely. Posts are activity just as much as comments - arguably even more so, since Lemmy is not immune to Reddit’s flaw of having a hundred comments saying essentially the same thing. Some subreddits have insightful comments that are worthwhile in-and-of themselves - but they are few and far between.

  • Otter
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    1 year ago

    The great thing about lemmy, or the fediverse at large, is that people can have control and freedom over their social media platform. Block what you don’t like and subscribe to what you do like. There’s no single large entity deciding what everyone should see.

    The bots exist because there are people that like them for whatever reason. Maybe there are niche communities that they want to keep up with, or career/school/local communities that they still want to read about without having to open up Reddit.

    why do you suck?

    It’s fine asking why, but like I said above, people have the freedom to customize Lemmy to their liking. Let them do what they want and customize your experience for yourself.

    • Aa!
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      81 year ago

      The drawback to this is lower new user engagement.

      Face it, most people who come look at Lemmy aren’t looking to block several dozen accounts and communities to make the feed useable. Most don’t even want to look for communities at first, they just want to see what the vibe is on the main feed, and judge from there

      If we want to draw in more users and increase engagement, we need to cater to more than just the people who are ready to customize everything before judging. There’s a few possible ways to go about this, but it’s very clear that “just block things you don’t like” isn’t going to be enough.

      I realize the drawbacks to any solution here, but as it stands now, even when I block the bots I don’t like, there’s not enough real content and discussion, and my own engagement is decreasing. The solution is probably not to ban all these bots, but leaving it alone as it is isn’t working well either

  • @4am@lemm.ee
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    381 year ago

    The ones that post 60 articles about every sports team from some aggregate of RSS feeds and run on a timer every 30 mins and clog up the feed are annoying as well

    • Cyborganism
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      71 year ago

      This is the main reason it’s so annoying.

      You try to scroll by new and you see a hundred posts on the same community from a reddit bot.

  • @Hudomi@lemmy.world
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    431 year ago

    I hope at least AskReddit stays far, far away. I don’t need dozens of “Sexers of Lemmy, what is the sexiest sex you’ve ever sexed” shit every day here.

  • Communist
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    281 year ago

    I don’t understand why anyone cares. I’m pro-repost bot, whether a real human posts the content or not makes no difference to me, I just want the content.

    • @TexMexBazooka@lemm.eeOP
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      101 year ago

      I want content that’s interesting an engaging. Not a firehose of bullshit drowning out actual posts

      Certified suck

      • Communist
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        141 year ago

        There appears to be no difference in quality of the content for me.

        • @NotSpez@lemm.ee
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          61 year ago

          I do this, and it has drastically improved my experience. However, I do miss the TLDR bots.

          Also, I do share OP’s opinion that a lot of quality comes from interaction, so these re-posts aren’t doing anything for me. I do appreciate that that is a personal opinion though.

          • @yokonzo@lemmy.world
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            31 year ago

            I mean, you kind of just have to deal then, since that’s not something that can be programmed in. Your definition of “decent bots” for example, might wildly vary from someone else’s definition

    • Captain Aggravated
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      151 year ago

      The major one I’ve noticed/been annoyed by is someone reposting r/buildapc questions to Lemmy. None of the responses. No way to communicate to the original redditor to genuinely respond, just…here’s the post devoid of all other information.

      On a scale of 1 to 10 with 10 being the most enjoyable, how would you rate that as “content?”

      • Communist
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        21 year ago

        1 but I’d also just block that community anyway

        I’d also consider the original reddit one a 1

  • @smackjack@lemmy.world
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    41 year ago

    I’m convinced that Reddit themselves are either behind those bots, or are deliberately looking the other way. Those bots posting and commenting make the site look more active than it actually is.

  • @N00b22@lemmy.ml
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    21 year ago

    Need context on the question. You mean reposting stuff on Reddit or reposting stuff from Reddit?

  • @CluckN@lemmy.world
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    41 year ago

    It’s difficult to build new communities. You need fresh content to attract a crowd and unfortunately the best way to do this is with Reddit reposts.

    • CosmicSploogeDrizzle
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      81 year ago

      It’s the easiest way to seed content but isn’t the best for building a community. Communities need to be more than RSS feeds. And that missing element is a human filter IMHO. Curated content.

    • @seathru@lemm.ee
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      41 year ago

      I don’t think most people mind curated reposts at all. No one wants to see every reddit post copied over en masse. Well, I guess a some do, but they suck, as is covered in the post title.