• KingJalopy
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    481 year ago

    Jesus Christ, I could barely use Reddit when it was free. Can’t imagine being such a tool I’d pay for the privilege of browsing that fucking ridiculous echo chamber. Moving to lemmy was the best thing I could’ve done. Wish I’d known about this place sooner. So much less ridiculous nonsense infighting and parroting basic ass taking points.

  • LazaroFilm
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    381 year ago

    So basically it’s. Pay per view. Glad I jumped off the train in time. This is madness.

    • @[email protected]
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      111 year ago

      Especially since the whole attraction to Reddit was basically unlimited scrolling to get to the next news story/meme. You really don’t want to have to think about limiting that.

    • @[email protected]
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      21 year ago

      I wouldn’t mind a pay per view model for general news Eg you see an interesting article on Lemmy that is behind a paywall but instead of having to subscribe to the NY times or whatever you can just pay 10c or so to read the specific article. ( To the news site directly not Lemmy) Needs to be low enough so the average punter doesn’t think twice to spend it. Quality journalism does need payment somehow and we are about to be swamped with garbage AI articles.

      I would have considered subscribing to Apollo to access reddit through it for a reasonable cost but they have royally screwed any chance of that happening.

      • LazaroFilm
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        141 year ago

        If Reddit starts charging for content they should pay their writers.

  • @[email protected]
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    151 year ago

    If Reddits pricing was reasonable I would not find this objectionable but the way the Apollo developer spoke about this, the API pricing was meant to kill third party developers.

    • @[email protected]
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      91 year ago

      It’s like a 90s phone bill all over again.

      “You were shit posting? Before 9pm? In a long distance subreddit!!! Our reddit bill is ludicrous!!!”

  • AutoTL;DRB
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    131 year ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    The costs of a subscription will go up based on a user’s daily average number of API calls, essentially meaning that the more things a person does in the app, the more they might have to pay.

    Here is the full list, from developer DBrady’s post, which appears to include Google’s take of the subscription and Relay’s expected revenues:

    In the newest release of Relay, DBrady says they also added the ability for users to see their average daily API calls.

    The plan is for a subscription to roll out in two or three weeks from the time of their post and they expect to charge a monthly cost of $3 or $4.

    “This won’t cover the cost of ‘super users’ who use the app all day, but, on average, it should allow me to pay the Reddit API bill,” the developer said.

    Many subreddits and users protested against the switch to the paid API in-party because of its effect on the third-party app ecosystem.


    I’m a bot and I’m open source!

  • @[email protected]
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    61 year ago

    This is like they tied the uncle (the cool one, not the drunk thanksgiving gop candidate) to a stripper post and are making him dance for dollars now.

    After they dug the poor bastard up after he’d just been unceremoniously raped to death by Spez. You loved your uncle, now pay to see whats left dance around.

  • @SkyezOpen
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    61 year ago

    I’m curious how the dev’s math will pan out. I doubt many casual users will stick around to pay a few bucks when the mobile app works for most people, and the types that would pay 5 a month are probably the types to reddit throughout the day,