My guess would be redlib as the most popular. It lets you read Reddit without having to turn off your VPN or log in.
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I wouldn't really consider that an alternative but that is probably more popular than lemmy
Most popular, probably, but that doesn't mean it's popular. There are some old phpBB forums with more users than all of Lemmy combined.
the fediverse is the most popular reddit alternative.
the individual platforms, like lemmy, are a part of an ecosystem.
Along with the compatible platforms like PieFed, Mbin, Friendica, nodeBB, etc., this seems to be the biggest general-purpose with communities
It's nice that we can all work together. And the networking effect helps out quite a bit. We are not in competition, we are a collaboration.
The most popular Reddit alternative is day drinking and screaming racist abuse at passers by on the street.
I'm in
You don't even have to register!
i have nothing but anecdotal evidence to go off of but just today i saw a lemmy post used as a source in a news article, which i can't say i've ever seen of any other "link aggregator" aside from reddit. so it's certainly up there!
and like others said, the activitypub interoperability certainly helps. i'm an mbin user but i'd wager more than half of my subscribed "magazines" are actually lemmy communities
404media is exactly the site I would expect to be aware of Lemmy among the semi-mainstream tech outlets (along with TheVerge to a lesser extent).
I saw Lemmy on an Instagram meme page, and I haven't seen any other reddit alternative (unless you count 4chan technically)
Atleast of which i know of and its good enough i guess. Its not perfect but its all i got and its not horrible so i'll take it.
For sure. If you check out the subreddit for alternatives it’s basically: posts advertising Lemmy, posts complaining about Lemmy, and posts for new alternatives with like 5 users, typically by the founder who appears to be engaged in some get-rich quick scheme.
Oh and people who for some reason buy the BS from Digg.
Probably. I went searching specifically for reddit alternatives. Found Lemmy immediately and haven't bothered to go looking for others. I assume many here followed the same path I did.
We're pretty lazy as a species.
Don't worry, I put a lot more effort into finding alternatives and still landed here.
Based on users yes, but also checkout PieFed. I switched to it a few months back, it's like Lemmy but better. (for me at least)
For OP's purposes they're probably identical.
lemmy, mbin, piefed all aggregate the same stuff and its all reddit like. people make places to discuss particular things.
Well there's Dread, the most active subdread has almost 500k subscribers
I’ve looked on and off for a couple years now and Lemmy has the most momentum that I’ve seen.
Not exactly the answer to the question but I do want to comment that I think a lot of people went to sites that aren't Reddit-like if they left Reddit. My husband went to Bluesky.
I'm pissed that so many people went to Bluesky instead of Mastodon
I'm actually okay with it. All of the insufferable people appear to be on bsky (all of the Twitter converts) and all the really interesting people are on Mastodon. Bsky is also full of AI slop.
Mastodon needs a UI that better facilitates on-ramping people new to the platform. I tried it a few times and it just felt like work finding people to follow.
Bsky on the other hand is a twitter clone and so people leaving twitter really don’t need to rework their understanding of how to use the platform.
I don’t like Bsky though so I don’t use either of them.
"Finding people to follow" struck me as odd. Discussing interests with like-minded people or just lurking and reading smart or dumb things would be the standard, at least in my experience. Maybe your path makes more sense. I'm a bit of an introvert so I usually avoid engaging.
Discussing interests with like-minded people
Facebook: discussing different things with friends
Reddit: discussing the same things with strangers
I'm good with discussing interests or lurking and reading stuff that's interesting but generally found it impeding to do either. The interface should be intuitive, and I don't think I should have to look to an external resource to figure out how to use the app (so I didn't).
Less people on Mastodon, to me, means that the Mastodon community is more purposeful across their instances. Less bloat/spam/etc
I like Bluesky a lot, but it's more a Twitter replacement than Reddit. Harder to talk to dedicated communities for things on there. Like if want show recommendations, I'd rather go to a community/subreddit that has 92k members than asking the 80 followers I have on Bluesky (only like 10 or less aren't bots I'm pretty sure or would even see my post) with the small chance a couple non-followers would see it and maybe comment.
There is lobste.rs which I see in Google search sporadically, but I think that is because it favors common domains and Lemmy content is spread out over thousands of indivdual domains
lobsters is invite-only so..... the definition of "reddit alternative" will vary per person in this case.
I use hackernews as well but it's more tech industry focused. Not really a replacement for reddit since there are no subreddits. It is run by a big evil company though if that gives bonus points.
Fuck Reddit and Fuck Spez.