Hope a two part question is allowed but after mostly lurking a lot, I’m noticing that there do seem to be quite a lot of Xennials. But on the other hand, also plenty of rebellious youth.

In my mind I’m thinking that Lemmy userbase is (very broadly generalizing) dividing into people who saw internet’s early days and as such, aren’t scared of the slight technical hurdles to enter. They tend to be a bit worldweary but Lemmy does feel a bit more like OG internet, which they like (this is me). But also, there’s younger people who are techy enough to deal with the hurdles too but see using Lemmy as a sort of an act of rebellion against the mainstream internet (which I appreciate).

That said I feel like the two clash a lot since the former tends to have fewer shits to give than the latter. As often is the case in the whole history of humanity.

Obviously there’s plenty of people who don’t fall into either camps, which is why I’m curious. Lemmy is small enough to have a sense that there are actual, real, individual people here, as opposed to Reddit’s amorphous blob of a massive userbase most of whom seem like bots.

  • AlexanderTheDead@lemmy.world
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    30 minutes ago

    Late 20’s

    I used reddit app so the api fiasco, while it bothered me on a fundamental level, did not directly affect me.

    Then I read some article about the potential for reddit to create paid subreddits or something?

    I don’t remember exactly why paywalled subreddits bothered me so much, but it was enough for me to decide to leave.

  • sin_free_for_00_days@sopuli.xyz
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    1 hour ago

    We don’t have enough personal data points from fediverse users to track consumer data points

    …I know. I’ll just ask them to give me their personal info. Trust me, this always works.

    No way. They care about their anonymity, it’s the reason a lot of them are there.

  • backalleycoyote@lemmy.today
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    2 hours ago

    40s. Pretty much the same as a lot of folks, grew tired of the Reddit bot-verse as well as kept getting banned for encouraging Shermination and posting pictures of Mussolini’s hanging corpse. Not incredibly tech savvy, but yeah, closing in on 30yrs of being on the internet. I still remember the first time I ever logged on. It was at a friend’s house, he went into a chatroom, someone sent us incest themed porn and asked if we want to roleplay a dirty Peter Pan and Wendy chat. Welcome to the internet!

  • Psythik@lemmy.world
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    3 hours ago

    Late 30s; got tired of getting constantly banned for every god damn thing. When they killed off my favorite reddit app that was the last straw.

    Fuck reddit and fuck that little pedophile Spez.

  • Schmoo@slrpnk.net
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    4 hours ago

    Late 20s, moved to lemmy during the Reddit API scandal like a lot of others, so it’s a deliberate anti-corporate choice. I’ve always been techy (I worked as a software developer at the time I made the switch) and I’ve always hated the corporate social media platforms. Reddit was the only social media that I ever used extensively and the API fiasco was the straw that broke the camel’s back. This may or may not be true for others who switched around the same time but it coincided with my political views becoming more radical; I used to consider myself a social democrat but by the time I fled Reddit I fully considered myself socialist and was on my way to becoming an anarchist.

  • Klanky@sopuli.xyz
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    4 hours ago

    41, came to Lemmy during the API thing.

    I think I’m pretty rare on Lemmy: I use Windows on my PC (although I’ve dabbled in Linux) and I don’t work in a tech field at all.

  • Curious_Canid@piefed.ca
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    6 hours ago

    I’m 65 and I hate the generation labels. I genuinely think they were originally pushed as another propaganda mechanism to create further artificial divisions between people. There is no doubt that people of significantly different ages are often different in various ways, but the over simplicity of the named generations just provides another convenient way to stereotype people instead of understanding them as individuals.

    I think I joined reddit in 2008. I’ve been involved in social media since the days of dial-up bulletin board systems in the late 70’s. (And I ran one of my own in the mid-80’s.) I had an email address on Bitnet in 1983 and was on Usenet in its early days. reddit was an interesting and open place for a while there and I enjoyed the variety, but most of it was becoming too cynical and tribal for me by the early 20’s. I discovered Lemmy a couple years before reddit’s API debacle, but that is what convinced me to drop reddit and focus on the Fediverse.

    I like the decentralized model of the Fediverse. I think the idea that different servers can have different rules is healthy. I stay away from parts of it, but I have found plenty of communities that are friendly and interesting to me. After hanging out on several different servers, I joined Fedican and have been happy here. It’s a nice place to call my home online.

  • Ryanmiller70@lemmy.zip
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    4 hours ago

    I’m 30. Came here after Reddit perma-banned me and this was recommended as an alternative. Found an app that basically makes it look like Reddit so it was easy to transfer over.

  • DarkFuture@lemmy.world
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    11 hours ago

    Early 40s.

    The API thing almost did it for me. The only reason it didn’t is because Reddit kept working through RedReader (still does). It was the bot banning that finally did it for me. Repeated bans and new accounts because some bot autobanned me for things I really don’t think I should have been banned for. Started noticing the bot banning was targeting comments that mentioned the 2nd amendment. That’s when I noped out. I had already been subbed to /r/RedditAlternatives for a while and Lemmy seemed to be what most people were posting about, so that’s what I went with.

    Also found out that subs could autoban you for posting in other subs they don’t like. So you’d comment in a sub and immediately get an automated message from another sub saying you’re permanently banned from their sub for posting in that sub.

    I don’t need that shit. I don’t need that shit even if I was getting paid for it. And I wasn’t. Bye, Felicia!!!

    • jtzl@lemmy.zip
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      11 hours ago

      Interesting. I’m 46, and sometimes I feel like a frog in boiling water online. I can ignore things I don’t like, generally, but I feel like the www I love/d has been replaced by a maze of ads.

      I was thinking about how the www up until, say, Covid was selecting for and encouraging a libertarian bias, but nowadays – now that the technical capabilities exist! – there are many moves towards conformity.

  • duncan_bayne@lemmy.world
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    9 hours ago

    Late 40s. Left Reddit after it became clear what they had become; joined Lemmy to ask an obscure question about Selenium.

  • Quilotoa@lemmy.ca
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    19 hours ago

    In my 70s. In response to the U.S. aggression, I switched to Lemmy.ca, a Canadian owned media. Not many other Canadian owned social media sites out there.