• @[email protected]
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    771 year ago

    Not really sure what Gizmodo thinks that Reddit “won”. They damaged their reputation, degraded the quality of their site, popularized competition, and embittered a significant portion of their volunteer labor force.

    • @merthyr1831
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      131 year ago

      They won in the fact they passed their shitty policy and killed off third party apps with relatively minimal resistance.

      But you’re right in that this was always going to damage Reddit in the long run.

      • @[email protected]
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        -11 year ago

        Relay for Reddit is still going strong, the dev spent a lot of time doing API call measurements and optimizations the past few months. He’s switching to a subscription model soon though.

    • @JGrffn
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      121 year ago

      And yet, reddit is still being used with pretty much identical traffic to before all of this (the “exodus” is essentially a rounding error when you compare reddit traffic variation to other platforms’ traffic variation, a statistical variation that can be ignored), moderators are still moderating, and this entire debacle will be almost entirely forgotten in a few months. Except now they don’t have competing phone clients, they can shove their nft crap and ads down redditors’ throats, and the IPO won’t be affected by this at this rate.

      I thought it would be different. I thought there was no way the majority of reddit would find it so hard to leave. It’s harder to leave other platforms when they prioritize you connecting with your own peers, but reddit? A news aggregator with comments? People simply didn’t care enough to leave.

      • @cyberpunk007
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        31 year ago

        How’s it identical? I know I’m not alone based on what I see here in that I haven’t been there since the API shit down. Fuck 'em

        • @JGrffn
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          11 year ago

          Right, but ex-redditors are still a very small percentage of the reddit user base. We might be a lot in numbers, but reddit saw a pretty similar decline in activity to pretty much every other major social media platform last month. That is to say, we didn’t really impact reddit as much as we think. The content quality is probably worse, especially due to low morale and lack of mod tools to combat spam and such, but the site will still remain as the main link aggregator for the foreseeable future. There’s little we can do about it except hope that more people reach their line and jump off the platform.

    • @cyberpunk007
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      1 year ago

      Lemmy has been an amazing replacement since this bullshit and now the good apps are coming over. You lose, Reddit.

      Welcome to the other digg effect.