Libreddit does work, but not all instances of it do.
Libreddit does work, but not all instances of it do.
On the other hand, it makes spammy articles from content farms the primary resource to find answers.
And either way, not everybody is doing this, so Reddit retains part of its usability, which still exists, and some portion of people will still use Reddit after the API changes.
Just shows how there is no “correct” side in this story. Awkward being a terrible power-hungry mod on one hand, and Spez deciding to prioritize on profit over community and usability on the other.
I feel like KBin is one of those “we only show our magazines by default, but if you’re an advanced user or you want to explore the fediverse a bit more, we have that option too, and you can even subscribe to federated communities/magazines” type of sites in the fediverse.
The advantage Beehaw has is the way the communities are organized - so much neater than in other instances. Every community on there is a giant hub, making these communities more visible and active than what we see on lemmy.ml and lemmy.world, and to some extent kbin.
Like this one I’m on right now.
(Tbh, I’m surprised how much kbin and lemmy are compatible with one another despite using different codebases)
This would make sense… if Beehaw wasn’t invite-only.
Mastodon and Firefish have been good alternatives for me, not to mention, they’re part of the same fediverse as KBin