Slashdot, a user-generated news, analysis, peer question and professional insight community. Tech professionals moderate the site which averages more than 5,300 comments daily and 3.7 million unique visitors each month.
As I said before, we don't have a really good idea on the number of unique IPIDs visiting the site, but we do have solid numbers for our daily comment counts. Here's the graph as generated by slashcode for a biweekly period:
(due to a quirk in slashcode, the graphs don't update until 48 hours later; our comment count for 04/01 was 712 comments total).
Taking in account averages, we're roughly getting a little less than 10% of Slashdot's comment counts, with a considerably smaller user base. As I said, the OkCupid story made me take notice. Here's the comment counts at various scores between the two sites
| SoylentNews | Slashdot.org | --------------------------------------- Score -1 | 130 | 1017 | Score 0 | 130 | 1005 | Score 1 | 109 | 696 | Score 2 | 74 | 586 | Score 3 | 12 | 96 | Score 4 | 4 | 64 | Score 5 | 1 | 46 | ---------------------------------------Furthermore, I took a look at UIDs on the other site, the vast majority of comments came from 6/7 digit UID posters. Looking at CmdrTaco's Retirement Post as well as posts detailing the history of the other site most of the low UIDs are still around, and are simply in perma-lurk mode.
(Score: 1) by Serial_Priest on Wednesday April 02 2014, @04:25PM
I joined "the other site" at some point in 1998 while in high school, and found it a great focal point for clever, experienced, computer-technology-oriented people. When I (rarely) lurked, it was out of lack of useful things to contribute. As the site's popularity gradually attracted a different userbase that had less interesting/informed conversations, my attention migrated to other forums/channels. It was also clear that the site was being poorly commercialized - in other words, it was no longer about discussing/sharing information, but rather selling the site visitors' data (comments, viewing habits, personal information) to advertisers and tracking companies. The feudal model of the NSA's harem (Google, Facebook, Apple, et al) is the antithesis of what everyone had been working towards throughout the 1980s and 1990s (but that's a whole other discussion.) In any event, I hadn't signed in or commented in years when the marketing drones hammered the final nail into the coffin.
This site, so far, based on the style and content of the comments and stories and structure, seems promising. I just hope the admins won't pull an Oculus Rift on us.
(Score: 2) by NCommander on Wednesday April 02 2014, @04:47PM
In my research on writing this up, I came across this: http://slashdot.org/story/07/10/17/1412245/history -of-slashdot-part-3--going-corporate [slashdot.org]
I was somewhat horrorifed at the concept of SN going through that. We're going community governance, and we'll TRY and run on donations only. If we have to do, we'll run ads, but we'll self-host, and not sell our user information (also known as the type that doesn't pay a lot)
Still always moving