All I can say is that people don’t necessarily work like that. If they don’t have a strong preference for a social group, they aren’t going to ignore things they don’t like.
Agreed. Still my point remains, to what extent should a group stop doing certain activities to accommodate hypothetical future members who might or might not join even if the group ceases doing said activities.
Agreed. Still my point remains, to what extent should a group stop doing certain activities to accommodate hypothetical future members who might or might not join even if the group ceases doing said activities.
A fair question, though it’s worth noting that those particular activities were also annoying some current members.
Indeed—at the time, at least two of the site’s “top contributors” were specifically put off by it.