sad seeing how many of them folded straight away
Makes me wonder what they are getting out of it. I mean if it is just volunteer work, the job goes to shit, the company you are volunteering your time with threatens you, why not drop it and take it to another platform where you would be appreciated.
Maybe they have a good reason to cave. But I can’t see it and my naivety just makes me think they are getting kickbacks somewhere somehow.
So we’ll take the protest to the comments? Who’s gonna mod if they kick out the mods?
You know what? Options exist, alternatives have been literally plastered everywhere on reddit since one week before the blackout began. And everything the CEO has done since then very clearly shows he considers us shit.
Some people don't care? They're eager to be treated like that? They probably deserve to stay on reddit, it's up to them.
it's surprising how many people will do things for free if you delude them into thinking they have power.
get back to unpaid work or else!!!
Weak ass protest if mods just cave.. I'd be like go for it fuckers.. I mean you aren't going to pay someone and just placing random folks in that position without the mod tools necessary to do the unpaid job is really going to implode.
I don't like many things about reddit.
Having said that - this article is bullshit. Let me draw you a picture. You run a company that has a product. You give the users of your product a lot of freedom. That is naive, wishful thinking, goodwill, whatever. Your users start having an issue with the direction of the company. Your users start sabotaging your company. You find yourself between a rock and a hard place.
No matter what you do or do not do - bullshit articles like this will pop up.
I don't agree. Reddit didn't need to make their API costs hundreds of times greater than it actually costs them. If they made them reasonable, both sides could have profited. Apps would still live and Reddit would still earn money from the users using those apps.
Another thing, the whole point of Reddit is that you're giving the users a lot of freedom. The concept doesn't even work if you don't do that. Reddit can't moderate all of the subreddits themselves, there are thousands upon thousands of mods doing it for free. Reddit can't take on that job, it would cost so much they would be bleeding money.
Same as the other comment - irrelevant. This article is not about API pricing. Not about the blackout. It's about reddit trying to save whatever ruin there's left.
If you wanna focus on that part then the second part of my comment still stands. Reddit can't survive without the work of unpaid moderators and saying that it was a mistake to give the users freedom is kinda stupid. The whole point of Reddit is that users have freedom, remove that and Reddit doesn't work anymore.
Not having the ability to have a private subreddit would affect very little for the absolute majority of users. Actually - what is even the point of a private subreddit? Private messaging has existed forever.
Anyway, I digress. This article feels to have been spawned into existence purely because the authors had nothing better to do with their lives.
The rest of the world differentiates pricing based on type of usage, one thing is users/small devs, a totally different thing is corporate usage (AI scraping in this case).
It would have been more than enough for reddit to do the same and noone would have objected.
It's reddit who put themselves "between a rock and a hard place" by managing this in the most ridiculously stupid way possible, not the users.
You are correct. Unfortunately, that is not what the article is about.
Those fuckers are undeleting my comments.
How did you know?
Because I deleted all my comments and logged in and my coments are coming back.
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