He set most of it on fire the moment he purchased it, since it wasn’t even really worth that.
He set most of it on fire the moment he purchased it, since it wasn’t even really worth that.
I think it would be better to think of it like a cigarette patch
The goal is to lower your activity to your assumed essentials, and eventually stop entirely when you start replacing it in your daily activities.
It makes it easier for people either on the fence or just not entirely comfortable with trying something new.
btw I have to select English to respond to your comments
I see no way to change that from kbin
How does a 0.02% increase in traffic for one week benefit reddit? Are you familiar with their metrics and how investors judge their performance? Until you can support your baseless assertion that Lemmings using reddit will notably alter their overall activity, your argument is DOA.
It’s .02% on top of people who didn’t leave, and again: For something that will probably be mod-swept.
Why are you pushing so hard to make people go back for that?
Like there’s various ways you can take those same numbers and put them against the attempt, but the biggest factor is just the fact that Reddit already moderates against threads. So of course they will moderate against lemmy. So you’re practically giving them traffic for nothing at all.
Again, there’s a very good chance the mods will delete it, and part of the whole point is to not bring them back traffic. Because that’s the point of the r/places event.
So I really don’t think it’s actually better than doing nothing.
Let’s put it this way, the realistic number goes both ways, the people who would be working on the spot, and the people who might check it.
The mods just flat out removing it is an additional factor against the project.
This seems like a bad idea…
Aside from giving them traffic, which i’m pretty sure is one of the major goals of r/place…
how much are you banking on people actually seeing it, let alone caring about it?
I mean they could even just mod-erase the spot couldn’t they?
I’m just saying it’s a lot of traffic for them that doesn’t seem like it’d actually be of any benefit to anyone but Reddit.
Is there no government oversight for “Uhh no you aren’t?”
Given the recent animal testing results this seems like assisted suicide