supposedly there’s going to be a permanent protest on June 30th if they don’t revert the API changes after this one, can’t wait to see what spez thinks then
It was pretty obvious that a 2 day protest wasn’t going to affect Reddit in any way possible. They know that this will pass. Their main user-base are the people who just view Reddit as just another social media app, and just consume content without ever participating in any community, will continue using Reddit normally. They’ll be confused about the whole situation, and once the subs are back online in 2 days, it would be like nothing has every happened. People who have been hurt are power users and mods.
What will really hurt is going dark indefinitely. Just put a complete stop. Half assed protests ain’t gonna get them to conclusions. So I think if the 8000+ subreddits that have been set to private or have restrictions, should go dark indefinitely.
I dunno, I don’t think this is going to stop tomorrow. It’s appearing that this might be a permanent schism for a good chunk of Reddit.
Most of the complaints and fears about moving to lemmy, for me, seem a lot easier than it was made out to be. Even though communities are divided across instances, it seems pretty easy to find them, and it seems pretty easy to discover new communities.
I’m not that smart myself, and I figured out how to get on here fairly quickly. Getting on is pretty much like signing up for a reddit account once you know some of the main instances.
I actually like how Lemmy works, and I find it way better than Reddit TBH. The whole idea of a fediverse sits well with me. Also there’s no nonsense stuff like karma or awards.
The lack of karma keeps things local. It prevents trolling by amassing low karma. And it prevents communities from gatekeeping by using karma too. All nice things!
supposedly there’s going to be a permanent protest on June 30th if they don’t revert the API changes after this one, can’t wait to see what spez thinks then
It was pretty obvious that a 2 day protest wasn’t going to affect Reddit in any way possible. They know that this will pass. Their main user-base are the people who just view Reddit as just another social media app, and just consume content without ever participating in any community, will continue using Reddit normally. They’ll be confused about the whole situation, and once the subs are back online in 2 days, it would be like nothing has every happened. People who have been hurt are power users and mods.
What will really hurt is going dark indefinitely. Just put a complete stop. Half assed protests ain’t gonna get them to conclusions. So I think if the 8000+ subreddits that have been set to private or have restrictions, should go dark indefinitely.
I dunno, I don’t think this is going to stop tomorrow. It’s appearing that this might be a permanent schism for a good chunk of Reddit.
Most of the complaints and fears about moving to lemmy, for me, seem a lot easier than it was made out to be. Even though communities are divided across instances, it seems pretty easy to find them, and it seems pretty easy to discover new communities.
I’m not that smart myself, and I figured out how to get on here fairly quickly. Getting on is pretty much like signing up for a reddit account once you know some of the main instances.
I actually like how Lemmy works, and I find it way better than Reddit TBH. The whole idea of a fediverse sits well with me. Also there’s no nonsense stuff like karma or awards.
The lack of karma keeps things local. It prevents trolling by amassing low karma. And it prevents communities from gatekeeping by using karma too. All nice things!
They forced reopening advice animals and probably will do the same to other subs. I’m more partial to the raziing idea
The best thing about the fediverse is that this won’t ever happen because of being decentralised. IMO this is the ideal forum/link-aggregator model.