Apollo has become the center of a platform-wide fight between Reddit and its users.
Another really good one by the Verge here:
Reddit CEO tells employees that subreddit blackout ‘will pass’
https://www.theverge.com/2023/6/13/23759559/reddit-internal-memo-api-pricing-changes-steve-huffmanOof
many of them will come back by Wednesday
We have not seen any significant revenue impact so far
like all blowups on Reddit, this one will passThey’re not entirely wrong, many will go right back, but it’s more about the broken trust. Reddit is dead to me and the refusal to listen to the community at all really seals it.
Yeah, I have some communities I’ll continue to participate in on reddit simply because I can’t find a similar community on the fediverse at this time. But it’s only a matter of time before those communities will grow a large enough presence elsewhere. When the blackout lifts, there are a few communities I’m a member of where I expect we’ll have discussions about a fediverse alternative… ultimately it’s not about how many users are back on reddit tomorrow, it’s about how many users and communities have started to break their relationship with reddit and prepare themselves for other alternatives.
This is a good call out. Users will return on Wednesday and a number of them will return sharing links to places like this (at least I hope 🤞)
and a number of them will return sharing links to places like this
That’s my plan!
I’m absolutely loving how thoroughly The Verge is covering this story. No other tech news site seems to be updating this situation so frequently and with such a supportive tone.
There’s a reason for that. While officially for tax purposes, Reddit was made independent because Advance Media didn’t want that big a failure on their books, Advance is still the majority shareholder. That means that the following publications either would be on Spez’s side, or have to keep muzzled. I think it’s better for them to keep out of it rather than wade in and be called out for the mandates that’d come down from Editorial.
- Wired
- Ars Technica
- Backchannel
A lot of the tech world goes to those as canonical sources. That means it gets kept dark.