Please post one top-level comment per complaint about Lemmy. You can reply with ideas or links to existing GitHub issues that could address the complaints. This will help identify both common complaints and potential solutions.

I believe there are a large number of feature requests on Lemmy’s GitHub page, making it difficult for developers to prioritize what’s truly important to users. I propose creating a periodic post on Lemmy asking users to list their complaints and suggestions. This way, developers can better understand the community’s biggest pain points and focus their efforts accordingly. The goal is to provide constructive feedback so developers can prioritize the most pressing issues.

Please keep discussion productive and focused on specific problems you’ve encountered. Avoid vague complaints or feature wishes without justification for why they are important.

Here is a summary of all the complaints from the previous post from six months ago. It’s interesting to see how many issues have been solved and whether or not developers value user feedback.

spoiler

• Instance-agnostic links (links that don’t pull you into a different instance when clicked) • Ability to group communities into a combined feed, similar to multireddits • Front page algorithm shows too many posts from the same community in a row, including reposts • Need to separate NSFW and NSFL posts • Basic mod tools • Proper cross-posting support • Ability to view upvoted posts • Post tagging/flairs and search by flair • Better permalink handling for long comment chains • Combine duplicate posts from different instances into one • Allow filtering/blocking by regex patterns • Avatar deletions not federating across instances • Option to default to “Top” comment sort in settings • Migration of profile (posts, comments, upvotes, favs, etc.) between instances • Mixed feed combining subscribed/local/all based on custom ratios • Categories of blocklists (language, NSFW, etc) • Group crossposts to same post as one item • Feedback for users waiting for admin approval
• Propose mixed feed merging subscribed/local/all feeds • Ability to subscribe to small/niche communities easier • Reduce duplicate crossposts showing up • Scroll to top when clicking “Next” page • User flair support • Better language detection/defaults for communities • Ability to subscribe to category “bundles” of similar meta-communities • RSS feed support • Option to turn off reply notifications • Easier way to subscribe across instances • Default to “Subscribed” view in community list • Fix inbox permalinks not navigating properly • API documentation in OpenAPI format • Notification badges should update without refresh • Single community mode for instances • Reduce drive-by downvoting in small communities • More powerful front page sorting algorithm

  • matcha_addict@lemy.lol
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    9 months ago

    Searchability is bad.

    Growing a new community is hard. I wish people used lemmyverse more often.

    Having a fully customizable feed algorithm would be a killer feature.

    • morrowind@lemmy.ml
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      8 months ago

      I may get flamed for this, but having having algorithmic recommendations would be good. The ones we’re used to suck because they’re designed to maximize metrics like engagement for advertisers, but it is entirely possible to have one that’s user focused and can be turned on/off as users wish. And it doesn’t have to be some super complicated thing out of the box

      • matcha_addict@lemy.lol
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        8 months ago

        Feed Algorithms aren’t inherently wrong imo. The problem with typical feed algorithms is two things:

        • no user choice or control: the user cannot opt out of the algorithm, and cannot customize the algorithm
        • lack of transparency: there’s little to no visibility how exactly the algorithm operates.
        • morrowind@lemmy.ml
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          8 months ago

          Stream’s discovery queue is a good counterexample: optional, doesn’t manipulate you or waste your time, and each item indicates why it’s been recommended (though in my case it all seems to be because they’re popular).

  • therealjcdenton@lemmy.zip
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    9 months ago

    Multiple communities with the same topic across multiple instances, gets kinda confusing and makes it harder to block ones you aren’t interested in

  • Swarfega@lemm.ee
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    9 months ago

    I know it comes with more users. But the default filter on Sync for Lemmy (Active) means I see the same post at the top of my feed for 2 days! Previously on Reddit that would change like the wind changes direction.

  • Simon@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    9 months ago

    Probably the userbase so far. Love the platform. The political stuff on here especially seems like it comes from people who’ve never been laid or been able to hold a serious conversation in public.

    • eggmasterflex@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      I think there’s a lot of self selection going on. Most people who migrated here did it based on principles (or a persecution complex), so of course they will have lots of political opinions, often extreme. Frankly, it’s getting a little tiring seeing it everywhere. Even on gaming subs it seems like every other post results in a discussion about the evils of capitalism.

      • misk@sopuli.xyz
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        9 months ago

        Even on gaming subs it seems like every other post results in a discussion about the evils of capitalism.

        I think it depends on community, I avoid all .ml ones for that reason. Don’t get me wrong, I could go on about evils of capitalism for hours if prompted but the real issue is that most of the user base is 13 years old either in their actual age or mentally so you’re seeing same performative cynicism over and over again. I’m also getting a feeling that over last 3-4 months it got much worse.

          • misk@sopuli.xyz
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            9 months ago

            It’s the common spaces / topic-based communities that are mostly affected by this so there’s no escaping this if you’re here for the news etc

      • Graphy@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        Yeah I’m always glad that certain communities are thriving on here but they tend to bleed over into every single thread.

        I find it most annoying when someone’s just casually venting and someone else comes in swinging. I get that it’s especially hard on the internet to tell if someone’s venting or looking for solutions.

        Like at this point I think it’s safe to say everyone on Lemmy has seen the same pro Linux, fuck cars, and fuck capitalism posts a million times. I think we do without one post dogpiling on some poor dude if they’re like “man traffic sucked the big one today!”

      • Grandwolf319@sh.itjust.works
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        9 months ago

        Are they though? Lemmy is the only social media site they complains about big issues AND does something about it (we are self hosted).

        People on lemmy actually put their money where their mouth is, imo that’s better than Reddit that complain and still use the platform and help it grow.

  • ZeroDrek@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    My only complaint is not enough people commenting on / interacting with posts. I’m guilty of it myself (I was also mostly a lurker on Reddit) so I’m not trying to blame anyone but Lemmy often feels like a ghost town.

  • (⬤ᴥ⬤)@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    9 months ago

    personally i think that there should be a way for communities in different instances to formally join each other in a way that sums up the subscribed and active users

  • Kedly@lemm.ee
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    9 months ago

    TBH it takes a LOT of blocking to finally start seeing the Tankies less. Threw me for a loop when I first started interacting with them, and I still find instances that I need to fully block in order to not have to deal with them

    • soggy_kitty@sopuli.xyz
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      9 months ago

      For me it’s the extremist left and right it’s had to block. It really is better without them

      • Kedly@lemm.ee
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        8 months ago

        I’ve definitely seen the extreme end of the left side of the spectrum here, havent seen as much of the right here though, much less the extreme variant… and I’m glad about that

  • db0@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    9 months ago

    Better integration within the larger fediverse, mastodon, friendica, pixelfed, etc. This is a killer feature that none of the big walled gardens can have and will improve the amount of interactions we have (which is a big thing people keep comparing about) a lot.

  • Salix@sh.itjust.works
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    9 months ago

    Ever since the Reddit exodus, so many people joined Lemmy who just assumes everyone lives in the US.

    “My rent is only $----/mo”. In what currency? A lot of countries use $.

    I noticed that sometimes comments asking “What currency?” or “What country?” gets downvoted even though the original post / comment isn’t obvious that they are talking specifically about US :(

    • soggy_kitty@sopuli.xyz
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      9 months ago

      The downvotes are from Americans. Remember that downvotes are not a measurement of correctness, it’s just popularity and there are more Americans here than any other country

  • Russ@bitforged.space
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    9 months ago

    This isn’t a problem of Lemmy itself in terms of the software, so I’m not sure it qualifies… But, I find that Lemmy still has the same problem of Reddit where if you say something that the majority of users disagree with, prepare to be torn apart in the comments. And I do not just mean by getting corrected on something you said being factually incorrect, I mean more of a “your opinion is wrong because…”

    For example, any discussion revolving around Linux (and let me just prepend this by saying I am a Linux user), if you happen to prefer using Windows be prepared to be told all of the reasons why you have to use Linux instead. And that’s usually tame compared to what I’ve seen on other subjects.

    Obviously there are cases where yeah, you absolutely deserve to be torn a new one in the extreme cases when someone is actually being truly vile, such as trying to advocate for the harm of someone/a group of people - but the “extremes” are not what I’m really referring to here.

    I’ve blocked a lot of users that while I’ve had no interaction with them, I see how they are clearly engaging in, let’s just say, bad faith with others.

    In terms of software-specific issues, I can’t say that I really have had a lot of problems with Lemmy itself as of recently. As an instance owner, I used to have a lot of weird (what seemingly appeared to be, at least) random federation issues, but I haven’t seen any federation problems in a while now. Though just today I swear I submitted a comment somewhere, and its just poof not there - not even locally, but I’m chalking that one up to something I’ve done (whether a misclick, or I’m just hallucinating as badly as an LLM) rather than an actual issue.

    • laxe@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      The opinion monoculture is not specific to Lemmy. Most social platforms, and even real life social circles, live in bubbles.

      The Internet anonymity combined with the upvote incentives only make the problem worse.

      I agree with your complaint but I don’t see it as something that can be fixed. We can all do our part to engage civilly and respectfully with others, but it won’t be enough to change the culture.

      • GlitterInfection@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        You identified one way this could be fixed.

        Remove or completely rethink voting.

        It was a bad system on reddit and it’s worse system here. There is no guideline for how it should be used, so a downvote means anything from “your community showed up on the all feed and I don’t want to see it” to “I disagree with you” to “your behavior warrants a report but I’m lazy and this button is right here.”

        It’s not clear what it’s supposed to be used for, even on reddit. And here it’s worse because moderators can see your upvotes/downvotes, so people rightly using it without any guidance are getting banned from communities for downvoting.

        Removing it altogether and replacing it with a tagging system would be an interesting option. Communities could choose which tags are available, and users could apply them to comments. Maybe “helpful” or “propaganda” or “friendly” or “hard disagree” or whatever.

  • maegul (he/they)@lemmy.ml
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    9 months ago

    Multi communities. They would be a big deal IMO. If you could have multiple saved into a list so that you could check different feeds depending on what you’re interested in, it would be much better. Combine that with the scaled sort (as well as the others), and you’re managing your feed very well IMO.

      • maegul (he/they)@lemmy.ml
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        9 months ago

        AFAICT, it’s been something on lemmy’s radar for a long while too. I get the sense the devs never worked out how they wanted to do it or maybe were a bit too ambitious in what they wanted from the feature and so it was kinda left by the way side, unfortunately. If I were to ever start contributing to lemmy it’d probably be the first thing I try to pick up.

  • RonSijm@programming.dev
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    9 months ago

    I believe there are a large number of feature requests on Lemmy’s GitHub page, making it difficult for developers to prioritize what’s truly important to users.

    Github issues are annoying that way. You could solve it by closing down “issues” and using discussions instead. People can up and downvote discussions, and you can see that from the listview, unlike with issues.

    And you can have threaded conversations in discussions.