I never expected anything less. At this point in the Internet's development, you need substantial capital investment to challenge any of the major players - something decentralized like lemmy can reduce the costs necessary but by its nature social media requires a large install base in order to be attractive to new users, so spinning up something new at best will take a very long time but most likely will just never click until one of those larger players actually invests into it (ie Threads).
I never expected anything less. At this point in the Internet's development, you need substantial capital investment to challenge any of the major players - something decentralized like lemmy can reduce the costs necessary but by its nature social media requires a large install base in order to be attractive to new users, so spinning up something new at best will take a very long time but most likely will just never click until one of those larger players actually invests into it (ie Threads).