this post was submitted on 19 Jun 2023
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No Stupid Questions

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After all the BS from /u/spez?

(page 2) 50 comments
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[–] learningduck 15 points 1 year ago

Because the content that people dump into it for years and communities are valuable. May be if some of those communities migrated to lemmy and I just keep accessing contents from way back machine, then I may not want Reddit anymore, but at the moment. I wish for it's redemption

[–] fairyprincess 14 points 1 year ago (2 children)

some people still poop in holes in the ground.

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[–] Kiernian 13 points 1 year ago

Why? Because the whole reason reddit is even worth visiting is the posters.

Sure, the people in charge of the whole infrastructure that supports the act of posting and reading posts are making destructive "business decisions", but until now they've largely been basically a bunch of invisible, nameless, inconsequential people as long as the proverbial lights stayed on for my ten years on reddit. They were technically in charge of stuff, but any time there was drama around reddit employees themselves, I had to go to places like /r/outoftheloop or /r/ELI5 in order to figure out what in the actual heck the inexplicable hubub was all about.

To me, that means they're NOT what reddit is, they're just the people who make it possible.

The folks who do lights and sound at a stage play are necessary for the play to function at that particular theater, but if they were the only ones doing anything there, noone would show up and stick around.

Inertia is a horrible thing. It took a LONG time for most of the niche communities on reddit to get "established" enough to have semi-regular content. Inertia being what it is, it will likely take quite a while for the same to happen here and it won't be exactly the same thing. It may be better and worse in some ways, but it WILL be different and some of us were quite comfortable with what we had. So, yeah, hope, because losing something you like and care about, watching it get gutted, wrecked, hobbled, and ruined is not inspiring or fun.

That being said, I'm seeing very encouraging things happening here so far, so this might become my new home.

[–] nightscout 13 points 1 year ago (4 children)

For people who were more than just the causal browser/lurker, Reddit was an amazing place to not only obtain information about very specific things, but also to connect with other people. I have type 1 diabetes and the ability to connect with other type 1 diabetics to commiserate, share information, and seek help on Reddit was like nothing else anywhere else on the internet. I have a few other niche interests that also only had communities on Reddit.

Years ago, these things (health conditions, niche interests, etc) all had their own separate forums scattered throughout the internet. One forum might have a few dozen people, one might have a hundred or so. But Reddit quickly became the central place where we could connect. Whereas forums could maybe attract a few hundred people, subreddits could connect with THOUSANDS. There’s not yet been anything else like it.

Unfortunately, we made the BIG mistake of relying on a for-profit, centrally owned company to function as a town square. Same with Twitter. We found value in sharing information and connecting through these platforms, only to get screwed over by billionaire CEOs.

Hopefully we have learned our lesson. Hopefully something comparable will take Reddit’s place. It’s not going to happen over time. I never expected Mastodon to replace Twitter overnight. But slowly, very slowly, at least some people are seeing the downfall of corporate social media and will hopefully slowly switch over to federated alternatives. I don’t think it will happen quickly, nor will it happen for everything. But I do think it’s already happening. And it will happen faster if we get some good mobile apps.

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[–] g2g079 12 points 1 year ago

Because there is not yet a full alternative to reddit.

[–] wargreymon 11 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

I watched his recent interview (only for 10mins) but he described Reddit quite accurately. Namely, reddit(or platforms like ours) is a city, a city is living only if people are living. Also, he knew that very minimal and subtle moderation is the right way.

It sounds like a CEO who knows its stuff, but facts have been shown his actions and attitudes are outrageous. The moderation was good enough to reach success for 18 years, only bc people do it for Reddit for free. He only took the free ride on it.

The biggest problem I have with this guy is that the API charges is really selling people knowledges and memories as a product. It is supposed to be free and open. He is taking all the profits as business with no promises or giving back to the community. This model simply doesn't work well with us, I would rather stick to decentralised model as long as it is reasonably efficient.

[–] Vyressi 13 points 1 year ago (5 children)

There is nothing inherently problematic about charging for API access, it's the fact that the price they've set is ludicrous, something like 25 cents per thousand calls when you'd expect it to be more along the lines of 4-5 dollars per million calls.

It's like someone buying a free parking garage, letting mopeds park for free, and charging cars five hundred dollars a day for parking, and then, instead of just being honest and saying "Fuck people with cars no cars allowed," saying that the car drivers are at fault for wanting to use a more full-featured vehicle that takes more space

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[–] [email protected] 11 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I've being feeling that lately reddit had become full of repost bots and fake ads. Was there just because there was nowhere else to go

[–] Hypersapien 11 points 1 year ago

There are probably people who aren't even aware of what is going on.

[–] [email protected] 10 points 1 year ago (4 children)

We are losing a lot, this new ActivityPup fediverse is exciting but it is like going back a decade for long-term reddit users.

Reddit obviously sucks now and has been like this for years, IMO it was newReddit and its focus on Facebook users that was the biggest event declining quality. What we had slowly eroded and its no longer there, but there were still enough smaller active communities that it could still be a good experience.

We are rebuilding and it is fun and exciting, but we are losing a big part of our lives in the process, we wont have something equal to what we lost for a couple years to come.

[–] [email protected] 10 points 1 year ago

I agree, as someone who saw reddit evolve from r/reddit.com to what it is today, it took about 4 years for them to really get to peak old reddit with the introduction of multireddits. Other than that most of the development has been in the third party apps, and really much of that development has been updating the apps to match the evolving OS design language rather than new reddit API endpoints. But we now have the advantage of having a minimum viable product and people with years of experience building and moderating communities.

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[–] [email protected] 10 points 1 year ago

Hahaha people are stupid bro

[–] [email protected] 10 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Honestly, it's an information goldmine. You'll get answers to most obscure questions and in detail. All others sources on the internet are either fluff or endorsements. It it also inconvenient to have to visit two websites that does same thing. So people don't want to abandon what they are habituated to.

[–] The1Morrigan 10 points 1 year ago

Because Reddit is familiar and people like to stick with what they're used to and comfortable with.

[–] dreamfall 9 points 1 year ago (3 children)

I have no hope, but there are a few subs that I still love and it's sad that he is destroying that so he can make reddit like every other soul-sucking social network. reddit is unfortunately the only place I can go to discuss random things I love like the EPL, or WNBA, or the japanese show Gaki No Tsukai as no one around me in real live is into them. Hopefully some of that can transfer to lemmy or other places...but who knows...

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[–] T156 9 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Some people are optimistic, which isn't a bad thing, since by leaving Reddit, they would be basically abandoning the whole account, and the identity that they had established for themselves over there.

Others either don't really care about what's going on, or have no idea. It doesn't affect them, and from their perspective, it's much ado about nothing, or just the standard batch of Reddit drama.

Others might hope that making a fuss might get picked up by the media, which is likely to make Reddit back down, and ameliorate some of their proposed changes, hence the John Oliver business, which I don't think is an accident. There's some history there, since Reddit has previously stood firm on changes, only to back down when the media got a hold of things.

[–] Pinatasandnachos56 8 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I don't know man. I had hope once. Now it's gone. My favorite subs are vanishing and I can't blame them. I have signed up for here and Kbin. I was on reddit for over 8 years

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