Reddit and its communities are preparing for a life after the platform’s API changes forced popular third-party apps to shut down.
Reddit and its communities are preparing for a life after the platform’s API changes forced popular third-party apps to shut down.
So, I was on reddit for over 11 years, but I didn’t arrive there from Digg. I remember a big kerfuffle surrounding Huffman and his willingness to change critical comments, but I was fairly oblivious to the ramifications of all that. I think I was just largely enjoying the halcyon days of Pao where you didn’t have to think about reddit’s corporate structure too far beyond how skivvy Conde Nast was.
This current controversy I guess seemed more relevant to me because I exclusively used 3PA to access reddit. Back when I had iPhones, I was paying for one of the tiers of Apollo because I liked it so much. I am pretty sure I used to use alien blue way way back in the day. I used these mainly because reddit didn’t have an app on offer at all at these times and reddit for mobile was just inoperably clunky to use. As a share of the market, I was already brand loyal by the time reddit finally saw the writing on the wall that there was a need for an app. Now that I’m on Android, I was using Infinity (mixed feelings there about the fact that Infinity kept operating and I’ve since migrated and deleted my reddit accounts). I still feel resolved in my decision to leave reddit out of the principle of it all, and solidarity with Christian’s mistreatment even though my app of choice is apparently staying online.
You refer to the Tencent movement as a notable moment that shifted the course of reddit. Any other pivotal moments that come to mind for you @arotrios ?
I remember part of the fallout post-pao was that disastrous dumpster fire of utter scum that called itself voat.
That was yet another centralized shit show that left power in the hands of narcissistic parasites too.
The fediverse may be chaotic and disorganized, but that’s what true freedom is really like.