• justhach
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    301 year ago

    And there’s dumbasses on Reddit who defend this shit???

    You gotta remember that there are tons of casual users (which probably outnumber 3rd party app users, if we’re being honest) that haven’t ever known anything else, and they see all this noise as an interruption to their day-to-day scrolling.

    One of the subs I used to frequent most often (r/hockey) was full of users who were pissed that it was blacked out for the final game of the Stanley Cup playoffs, so there was no live thread for the last (and biggest, most important) game of the season, and thought anyone who supported the blackout was just being whiny.

    I’ve just accepted that Reddit’s base has shifted, its no longer what I remember it being, and I’m not a part of it.

    • @Greenskye
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      71 year ago

      Estimates of TPA users were pretty low. Like 3%. That said the majoriy of the content and moderation also only comes from like 1-3% of users as well. So it was always a question of how much those two small groups overlapped. You can afford to lose a large chunk of casual users. If you lost 50% of your content posters and moderators, they’d be fucked. Stale front page would be the death knell for most casual users. They aren’t loyal. They’ll jump to TikTok or Instagram or wherever to get their meme fix.

    • @SteelBeard
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      71 year ago

      We had a live thread here, and it was awesome.

    • @Dark_Blade
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      51 year ago

      Then it’s a good thing we moved on.