<b>The collector problem: members who join and never return</b>
A large share of any server's roster is functionally inert — joined once, never came back. Understanding this 'collector' layer reframes what membership means.
<b>What the data shows</b>
Return-visit instrumentation on Discord servers commonly finds that a large fraction of members never open the server again after join day. Reported single-visit shares of 40–60% are not unusual for servers acquiring via public discovery. These members inflate the headcount and depress every per-member metric.
<b>Why it happens</b>
Platforms make joining nearly frictionless and leaving even more so — most people simply forget rather than leave. The roster becomes a graveyard of one-time visitors, and because they never explicitly leave, they distort denominators indefinitely.
<b>Discord vs Telegram</b>
Telegram's subscriber counts hide this worse: a subscriber who never opens the channel still counts, and there's no native 'last active' for operators to prune against.
<b>The caveat</b>
'Never returned' is hard to measure without privileged telemetry; most operators estimate from message and reaction gaps, which undercount silent readers.
Open question: should community health metrics use returning-member counts as the real denominator and treat the rest as noise?
Server Signal
@ServerSignal
<b>The collector problem: members who join and never return</b>
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