What it says on the tin, really. I think this is going to be an issue when they get around to the smaller communities… It’s going to suck majorly, as most people’s default will remain with reddit for community discussion like this…

  • Beg to differ there. Reddit has shown it’s hand. They want to profit off free content while giving nothing back to the people who create that content. Back them at your peril.

    • The actual users or the community I should say, is not profiting off of anything. Don’t conflate the users of the service or app that is Reddit with its management.

      • Value SubtractedM
        link
        fedilink
        81 year ago

        Let’s be clear on one thing: as with any private social network, Reddit’s users are the product, not the customers.

        • @aufsichtsrat@startrek.website
          link
          fedilink
          3
          edit-2
          1 year ago

          They are the community, just like we users are here. Punishing them for something the Reddit management did, would be unnecessary vindictive, IMHO.

          • @NightOwl
            link
            4
            edit-2
            1 year ago

            Is it unusual that I don’t see vital importance in having to use a specific site? I think it’s maybe not healthy to be that attached to a corporate social media site, since people do eventually need to get used to the cycle of websites coming and going.

            Personally aside from just community I do feel like this has really drawn a big light on how information needs to be much more spread out as opposed to centralized and people being held captive by it. Maybe it’s dramatic but now is possibly the move towards reddit trying to become another dominant Facebook type corporation with way too much influence, and the focus mainly being on not wanting to ruin or break up communities is potentially a short sighted one.

            Like who thought Facebook would just go from social media to getting into VR and influencing groups during elections before they went public.

            And with stuff like AI training that’s a lot of valuable conversations reddit is holding too. Would it be so surprising if in the future people look upon reddit wondering why they had let them become so big? People laughed when Facebook started trying to branch out with their failed smartphone, but now they got people trapped using their services like WhatsApp. I feel like now this direction reddit is headed towards is less about just some internet communities now.

            When it comes to places to go to get information for regular people reddit had become too big, and would be better starting to break apart. Which is really unlikely with the massive amount of traffic they get.

      • I didn’t conflate them. I never said the users were trying to profit. Reddit is trying to profit off user generated content that is free given and moderated while whining that others are using the api they gave away for free to do the same thing, except those developers actually provide better user experiences and accessibility than Reddit does. Reddit has shown that the only thing that matters is the money they can extract from the free labor of others, so staying on that platform is acceptance of those consequences.

        • I know what Reddit is doing. What I’m saying is that the users and the community in many of the subreddits are not to blame and should not be blamed or punished by users who decided they no longer want any part or reddit.