When Reddit killed Apollo.
Me too. API death of reddit.
They thought disabling RIF would force me to use the Reddit Mobile App, but it just got me to break up with reddit finally after 10+ years.
Who nose, maybe this was all part of their plan to get rid of Reddit's original users and make room for a younger culture who doesn't care about privacy or ads or whatever.
It was Boost for Reddit for me. Note: I hate the ads in Boost for Lemmy, but I still havent jumped ship or started to pay for ad-free. When I go on contract at work (I hope) it'll be more possible.
e: wait, it's $5, one time? Ok, I'm killing the ads now.
I want to support the platforms that look at people for their interactions, not their marketability. APIs were going to be dead at Reddit and I wasn't willing to stand over the body with a knife in hand.
You were replaced by 20 llm agent -> more ads revenue
Same, but because Boost got killed in the crossfire. Still loyal to Boost on Lemmy btw.
The loss of Reddit third party apps and the reasons they were giving for them doing it felt like it was going to be a slippery slope of shit. The Reddit app was also shit at the time and still is.
With Lemmy, I can just go looking for another app if there's something I don't like and even if I don't switch between them, they also seem to be way more configurable too.
I switched and never looked back when they blocked third party clients and the mods started migrating to Lemmy.
I am brand spankin' new and didn't realize mods migrated too! That's great! Only thing I wish there was, was the database wealth of information that reddit has but that takes time and humans make that possible.
the 3rd party shutdown
Left during the purge of 3rd party apps.
They killed my favorite app "rif", so I started using the web version. Then they made the web version almost unusable with the "open this in our app" banner on every page which was the last straw for me. Can't use third party apps, and the web version is constantly nagging you to not use it? Stupid. Now I just use Lemmy on Firefox and have had 0 issues.
I was already "over" Reddit and fully invested in Lemmy by the time RIF went down, but RIF actually going from 100% working to not working...I actually watched it happen. That was surreal. I think that's when it really hit me that I'm not considered economically viable anymore.
Reddit told me I wasn't allowed to use a non-shitty application to read their content any more.
The death of third party Reddit apps.
Reddit being reddit caused me to look around.
The nice beeple at beehaw drew me in.
Now I have a couple accounts (beehaw was the first) and I haven't really run into many rude people. I like it here.
I used Reddit for a long time, since the extremely early days of the site, back when most of the content was posted by Reddit staff and there was really just one page.
While I wasn't enthralled with the move from old.reddit.com to the new reddit.com, the site was at least still accessible via the old interface, absent a minor quirk here and there in how Markdown was interpreted, and different ways of customizing subreddit appearance. That wasn't enough to cause me to leave.
What did it for me was that I expected that when they moved from their growth phase to monetization phase that they'd make some changes that I wouldn't like, but I didn't expect them to end access for third-party clients, which was not okay with me.
Quit reddit 5 years ago. Had a 12 year old account then.
Thread asked for early examples of racism against a certain group, by my country. I dug up such examples and translated them into English. The examples included slurs. Got permabanned for using slurs, no appeal.
Apparently I should have included a racism trigger warning in a thread asking for examples of racism, although the mod admitted that that wouldn't have saved me either.
This is a site which was notorious for indulging in gore with videos of people being killed by the way. Bunch of weirdos.
That's not why I deleted my account though. The last straw was when CIA thinktanks made a hostile takeover of all Middle East and geopolitics subs, forcing a Washington agenda to manufactor consent for war. The Afghanistan, Iran and Iraq subs were riddled with ex-military Americans and the mods were literally paid thinktank gooners. They were quite open about it too.
Wow, my account was 12ish years old too when I was banned the first time. Then I was able to access Reddit again because my partner has an old 11 yo account lol and then they banned that too, even with my VPN and a new device it was accessed from. They are shit ass. Both times I didnt do anything against the guidelines. They just didnt like my educational shit going viral because Americans arent majority fascist alt-right extremists despite popular belief. Most genuinely want basic human rights, healthcare and affordability. Duh. These rich people will eventually collapse because they are choosing to make a fake world instead of learning how to survive within the real one.
Paywalling the API was the final straw for me. I saw they reduced the price to something "reasonable" for the top few 3rd party apps, but too little, too late. Leading up to that, I understood the ads, I was satisfied with using old.reddit, and I thought we were making progress with fighting management. Killing all the small time apps and turning Apollo et al into an income stream (or, really, stifling competition to their ad-infested 1st patty app) showed there was no way back to the reddit I knew
Lol. Reddit hasn't been leftist in a long time if it ever really was. There were some leftist spaces, and I guess a lot of users were left-of-center, but the platform certainly wasn't.
I came over here when they blocked third party apps. I didn't join earlier because I thought it'd be similar to Voat, which was apparently horrible and an alt-right cesspool. I was pleasantly surprised. I like that people can have actual discussions here without things being flooded by thousands of comments.
Also, since you're new, I'd recommend against Lemmy.world. They're a little aggressive with moderation. They're the largest instance, which is another reason to go somewhere else. The fediverse works best when no one instance controls it.
Can you please elaborate a bit about that "little aggressive work moderation" on lemmy.world? I am there so I am interested.
reddit killed 3rd party apps and i don't wanna use their shitty app or websites on my phone so i just ditched it for lemmy
I left when it became clear they had no interest in dealing with nazi sympathisers, and when it became clear that transphobia was acceptable, as long as it was "civil". This was long before the Reddit API exodus
I found lemmy when looking for fediverse/federated Reddit like platforms, and spun up an instance to test it out. It was basically only me on the instance until the Reddit exodus happened, and then suddenly the instance and lemmy add a whole saw a huge growth in traffic.
And then we spun up a piefed instance when it became clear the lemmy devs also hold some shitty beliefs, so that users who wanted an alternative could have one.
I'm not going anywhere. Federated/decentralised social media is the future as far as I'm concerned. At the very least, it's the only future I'll consider.
When they try to force me ads in official app killing third party apps.
Fuck marketing! Everything it touches it turns shit
No ads and killing off third party Reddit apps.
Much like what happened to Digg back at the dawn of time, Reddit's relentless series of unforced errors, undesirable policy changes and deliberate enshittification finally drove me to seek out an alternative.
When Reddit started charging for their API Key. Killed off Apollo, best Reddit app on iOS. Didn't want to try the Reddit App. After Apollo officially shutdown, I stuck around reddit through old.reddit and it wasn't the same. Deleted all my accounts and jumped over to Lemmy. Joined Lemm.ee then that shut down and moved over to lemdro.id
Banned for saying that I would murder Andrew Tate given the opportunity.
He literally abuses women and likely has murdered some. He is disgusting. The fact our government has used surveillance laws and things like The Smith Act to go after leftist causes / organization and never the KKK or proud boys... says a lot about how much these entities (including the wealthy) care about equity or human rights. Never are any of the right wing extremists labeled as terrorists but the black panthers were.
Boost for lemmy being announced soon after the Reddit API pricing on a subreddit created for the protests
Reddit is shit now. PCMR is just memes and weird Linux vs Windows rivalry, Piracy sub is just memes and moral grandstanding, most gaming subs are just bots posting "news" articles, AIO/AITAH are just karma farming for people selling accounts or fanfic quality fantasies, many Linux subs are either insufferably elitist, have a weird fetish for distro-hopping or are just circlejerks (looking at you r/linuxmint).
The only thing it's still good for is niche interests which I doubt will remain the case for long.
AI/bots posting has become more "apparent" once they massively purged tons of actual users. it becomes lopsided now. if yuo ban someone using bots, it wont stop them, they will just fire up another 100+ after they figure how to evade your filters/moderation(carefully), and this not even propaganda bots. its the bots that reddit was targeting the most.
That's a bummer because the Linux communities here are super welcoming and helpful, and it seems like people expect the opposite. Probably because of reddit.
I used the Android app Boost for Reddit. One day I opened it as usual, browsed as usual, but something felt a bit odd. Turns out it was updated into being a Lemmy app instead. Fair enough then, I continued my scrolling.
Fled Reddit when the Exodus happened.
Access to the content we create not being controlled by any corporation or any person. That's about it for me, even though there were other things I did not like about reddit.
Was looking for a good alternative to Reddit for a while, then the API debacle happened.
EMPRESS brought me into lemmy, she quit later because she got banned off .ml, i stuck around, and eventually started my own instance.
I read about the Fediverse years ago and opened a couple accounts across a couple platforms. As I expected at the time, too low volume of people to really keep me engaged.
I stayed on reddit until same as everyone else here; they killed 3rd party apps and mod tools. I was a mod on a small, friendly little niche hobby sub. It started getting overrun by bots and MAGA types who wanted to make every post about guns and women staying home to serve their husbands. Good members started leaving the sub and I turned from having fun to loathing it very quickly. I created some fresh Fediverse accounts and made the move for real.
Because I love everything open source.
Typical angry reddit user. I didn't like that they allowed r/conservative to be a sub full of racist shit. Then they banned one of my favorite sub reddits. They're greedy and only allow you to use their shitty app.
I kept getting banned, got tired of making accounts. this place has its issues, but reddit is worse
I got banned by reddit by saying it wouldn't be a shame if the idiots who ride motorbikes on pavements in towns and nearly hit people ended up being hit by a bus
Another vote for Rexodus.
I value freedom and love free / libre / open source software. After the US trade war against basically everyone I searched for non-US Reddit alternative. Lemmy is a great combination.
I left Reddit because I realized that the people running it were complete assholes who believed money was more important than community.
What made me interested in Lemmy was the decentralized nature. What made me stay is how it reminded me of Reddit a decade ago and of course the community.
i think it was privacytools.io that got me here first, then reddit fucked up in 2023 and i actually got to use it more.
I came looking for the conversations with all the beautiful people here.
Okay fine, it was separation from difect corporate control.
But I stay to read the opinions of all you beautiful people
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