Ah that makes sense. Thanks for the info. Am I right in saying that the moderator's are also annoyed because they use Apollo or RIF for moderating as well as it is a better experience than on the app? I know I've seen them mention a mod queue or something like that which isn't available in the official app.
Doggylife
As someone who has 0 modding experience on Reddit. I'm assuming the third party apps (Apollo, Rif etc.) Are the apps that mods use daily to moderate. But I don't think many people understand that and it's never said when people make this argument.
I think it's the same with accessibility but I'm not too sure. Cause Reddit said they're allowing non commercial apps which provide accessability free rein on the API (bar nsfw posts). But I think a lot of blind people use conventional third party apps which work with their phones text to speech. But I've never seen this argument made.
I came over this week. Still using Reddit too at the moment to be honest but I'm hoping lemmy catches on a bit as the community at the moment feels nicer overall.
I like the idea of the federation. I think it's a bit too complex to become main stream but that's not necessarily a bad thing. Definitely some bugs especially using jerboa but it's very usable and I love the simple UI.
My race predictor said I should be able to do a 19 minute 5k. To test this out I did a 5k on the weekend and went out around 4 minute kilometer pace and definitely couldnt keep it up after the first 2kms. Finished in 21:18 which is still a nice PB but nowhere near 19 minutes.
I'm going to try guage my performance based on training runs from now on. I could do 5/6 1km reps at around 4:15 per km which seems to correlate with what I did during the race.
Yeah for sure. One thing I was thinking is that old.reddit and lots of the third party apps don't include new features Reddit put out (I think the API didn't include stuff like chat etc.) So they also could not want third party apps cause it might get in the way of people adopting new features (power users using apps that didn't have those features).
As a few people have said already, I think it'll slowly become more crap and alternatives will slowly bring in people who get sick of it.
They're hoping for IPO and once that's done, they'll be much less forgiving when it comes to cash grabs. I can imagine them doing things like getting rid of old.reddit, not allowing the hiding of suggested posts, ads which are very targeted and intrusive.
I saw an article on the official Reddit Inc website talking about the use context in advertising, where advertiser's can change their ad based on the context of the thread. It doesn't say how they're implementing this but I could imagine a situation where they put ads directly into threads. Either way you'll start to see ads using wording which mimics the subreddits you're in or the comments you write.
I have the feeling the reddits decisions are just going to get worse as long as they can get away with it.
I think Relay is looking into charging $3 a month.
I'm surprised some can afford that. In the FAQ for RIF, the developer said he'd have to charge around $10 per month and said that with that there probably won't be enough demand to make it worth his while maintaining it. RIF seemed like one of the more efficient apps when it came to API calls too.
113k user's is really impressive. I'm also very surprised how big Mastodon is. If never heard of it before.
I may be wrong here, but what I mean is they have ways to stop LLM companies from web scraping all of Reddit. The only other way the likes of chatGPT can get all the info is through to API which is currently free. So I think Reddit might be doing is saying this information isn't free so pay X amount for access to our data.
Obviously 3rd party apps like Apollo won't pay that, but Google and OpenAi probably will.
I'm not too sure what you mean by api data being worth less or more, it's all the same data.
I was thinking the same thing. Probably why the timeline is so fast too with only giving people a month's notice of the API costs. And could also be true of twitter.
ChatGPT and other LLMs are gaining a lot of value from information freely available online and sites with large user generated text submissions like Reddit/twitter want a piece of the pie.
I was glad to see RTÉ's own employees protesting. I'm sure people there are sick of the higher ups too.