Reddit's CEO reportedly told staff that the community's API protest will blow over
Reddit's CEO reportedly told staff that the community's API protest will blow over
Reddit's CEO reportedly told staff that the community's API protest will blow over
Fediverse will still take years to get up, but this was a massive boost forward for it, the momentum has shifted.
I feel with reddit there's a bigger chance for it happening than for Twitter since the network effect is smaller
A shame that mastodon seems to be soo much more "ripe" with more aps and better infrastructure than lemmy - if there where 3-4 apps to choose from already instead of just the one chances would be pretty good for lemmy establishing itself for real
Right now it just is a "too rough" experience for most people
For sure dude I honestly have been in IT and networking for 20yrs and never heard or knew about any of this. I think it's great!
Blow this, reddit
It blew me right over here to Lemmy
I don't care if all the subreddits come back. I've already deleted my account and will not be going back.
It's cute how this asshole thinks he's in control lmao, dude hasn't made an original post in his life.
He used rhetoric that any terrible leader would use. The threat of violence is to separate them from us. We see it play out with all our favorite narcissists that run business and our country. Glad I blocked them.
I mean to be honest there's a good chance he's not wrong. I really hope it won't and they will reconsider their decisions but knowing the majority of people this will last for about a week, there is still a decent amount of people who do use the official app and there are a lot of subs that, even if they're part of this black out now, will go up again because a big part their community did not take this situation seriously at all and felt like it's just outrage culture thing or just a temp solidarity thing. Even if it will blow over reddit will never be the same for sure, but it still might be profitable enough to keep it running the way it is. Hope that im wrong though.
Cool. I was going to hold out hope that something might change. But I've just deleted my account of 12+ years.
Go to the Winchester, have a nice cold pint, and wait for all this to blow over!
I can't wait to see how this all pans out. Will we see a "we listened" grovelling non-apology once they realise their core users are gone?
You know what, even if it does and everyone goes back. I will be continuing to hang out here I like this community and it's worth keeping this going regardless!
Sadly, I don't think he's wrong. It's quite easy to see how:
That being said, I personally have been enjoying the discussions being had on Lemmy. It seems to prompt for better discussion, since it appears that most people here are more tech-adept and willing to go through growing pains. I'll likely stick around, but I wouldn't be surprised if the number of active users here drops once this blackout ends. Still hoping for a change.
Eh. I did open reddit by accident a two times today myself, idly tapping the Relay icon and swiping it away on the loading screen.
But... I've also nuked my post history on all of my alts. My main account was a contributor on some tech subs where, while I abhor reddit making money off my freely given contributions, I also abhor the wanton destruction of freely exchanged information at a cultural level.
I'm considering how I could spare those posts and nuke the rest while I figure how to rehost that content elsewhere. Then again, I got that same info from somewhere else, and those sites still work so maybe the argument is academic.
Even I don't know what I'm about to do yet. Interesting times, indeed.
He's using the kind of language that abusers do.
I hope he's wrong, but I'm pretty sure he's right. 2 days isn't going to change anything, elpecially if he's willing to lie about everything.
So we're going to do a forever protest on June 30 right?
I'm already there
Dude's unironically saying "you'll be back" lmao. Well, it sucks that the intimidation tactic of demonstrating our numbers and solidarity with a short strike didn't work as I originally feared. I said a couple times in the lead up to the strike that only striking for two days instead of indefinitely was ultimately going to be a performative move because it would give them assurance that it would be temporary and so ultimately the scene as a temporary inconvenience at most by Reddit management. That to really make them hurt and to make them scared a sizeable portion of subreddits would have to go dark indefinitely.
Someone pointed out to me that the performativity was kind of the point, because it was just a demonstration of concern and solidarity, and I had hoped that would work as a sort of forewarning of a more serious strike if they didn't listen, but that didn't pan out I guess.
There is still the end of the month API deadline, Reddit is expecting everyone to return and forget the whole thing, which could work like the other "blowups" if the issue actually was over by then, but it isn't. If and when the 3rd party apps go dark it's going to kick off another wave of protest, and this time it's not going to end until 3rd party apps are available again. What is left to be seen is how many users, moderators and subs are actually willing to participate, and how many just throw in the towel and give up.
Realistically, it will. What’s left behind depends on the mods and users. Reddit isn’t going away that easily. Time will show impact
I expected it but still, it's a shame
The Verge posted the actual memo that was released, you can find that below and the article here
To me, this looks like it was absolutely destined for a public release/intended leak. The victimisation says it all with them crying that their employees are going to get attacked. This is a simply absurd statement.
Any indicated statement from a CEO of a community forum that insinuates that their users, who are currently undergoing a completely peaceful protest, are in fact, volatile enough to attack employees simply doing their job has completely lost the plot. Their position as CEO is completely untenable.
Thanks Reddit for throwing extra wood on the fire. I was getting concerned that it wasn't raging enough.
Think I may just leave the subs I moderate down for longer, then.
Might as well leave them down indefinitely. I'm gonna block reddit at the DNS level, I'm done.
Thanks for posting! This is wild. Internals are probably a disaster, to say the least.
I hate this part so much. Corporate overlords be gone!
This is just blatant "fuck your concerns it will blow over anyway".
He’s saying “we don’t need to listen to the community, they’ll get over it”. Again, completely tone deaf.
That's what it's all about.
Yeah. This is literally a warning. Not that many users have actually stopped using reddit, it's such a force of habit.
But once their favorite apps, that all their muscle memory has become trained to use, stops working?
They'll be gone.
Oh boy, I hope this statement pisses off a lot of people and motivates them to extend the blackout. My only criticism of the blackout was that there was an end date, Reddit only has to wait it out temporarily in that case, but idk this statement is kinda ridiculous. I hope people take it as the spit in the face it is, who tf is getting violent over subreddits going private? no one, extend the blackout!
Imagine wearing Reddit merch in public space 💀
Does the man not realize the absolute exodus the users are trying to warn him about? Blow over? Reddit will die overnight once people can't use their favorite third party apps anymore, or browse their porn subs.
I know the 80/20 rule, and that a big chunk of that 20 uses apps, but I’m not convinced. I thought the same thing about twitter when they killed off third party apps, and I ended up being the only one in my circle who moved to mastodon.
Uh yeah, if you have to tell your staff not to wear their otherwise innocuously branded clothing for fear of getting the shit kicked out of them ... you might just be the problem here.