• 0 Posts
  • 13 Comments
Joined 1 year ago
cake
Cake day: June 10th, 2023

help-circle
  • I think its going to end up a successful move for them.

    They built a platform. The users built the site over the years with minimal interaction from reddit.

    They now have a platform, millions of users, and full control of what they want on that platform.

    The writing has been on the wall for a while now, they want the traffic but don’t want the problems that come with mostly community driven content.
    All the profile redesigns, ability to “follow” users, profile pics, awards, all that has been an indication of the direction over the last few years. The last few steps was to kick out the problem users and be left with those who don’t really give a shit and just want to see memes on their phone while they take a shit. The people who hear about reddit and just grab the official app from the store. The people who don’t care about APIs and protests and modding or accessibility tools. Just eyeballs to look at their ads.

    Those people will stay. It doesn’t matter if 25% of the community leaves, because the natural growth in the next few months from the eyeballs will claw it back over time.

    Once they have an obedient user base who are strictly bound to what reddit want them to see, think TikTok or facebook users, that’s when they will see off. And it will pay off handsomely.





  • I would have gladly paid for a premium reddit experience, had it provided useful features. 3rd party app access is something I would have totally understood and paid for. RES features integrated, various styles such as old.reddit enshrined and protected, the option to opt in/out of various features, premium access to mod/admin subs that actually get a response, etc.

    Instead they offered awards to give out. No value, no purchase.





  • Hard disagree.

    Tiktok is popular. Its hold very little value to lots of people though. Same thing with twitter.

    For me, reddits value was from its popularity amongst a certain demographic, which was largely the techies. At this point enough techies have come over to the fediverse that so far its meeting or exceeding the reddit itch.

    Id rather a community of 10,000 people who are mostly tech driven than a community of 10,000,000 with 10,000 techy types. Popular reddit posts had thousands of the same played out comments and comment chains languishing at the bottom of threads. Popular threads on the fediverse so far have people engaging in conversation without a collapsed thread of 4000 ignored posts at the bottom.

    Popularity means nothing when its mostly people with nothing worthwhile to say except the same played out jokes and memes