Reddit announced a contributor program on Monday, which awards users actual, real money for their fake internet points. Now, eligible users will be able
Reddit will start paying you real money for your karma::Reddit announced a contributor program on Monday, which awards users actual, real money for their fake internet points. Now, eligible users will be able
So far, the Reddit contributor program is limited to users in the United States (to start, at least) who are over the age of 18 and can verify their identity via Persona and Stripe.
Guys, here's the real reason. So they can positively identify you. Evidently this is how much that knowledge is worth. They can probably then start selling your posted data to other companies that have also "verified" you via Persona and Stripe. Once those datasets start getting linked together, well I will let your imagination run with that.
Millions will sign up anyway, and we will see a rat race worst than Youtube. Content will be repost of a repost of a repost of a repost of a repost, comment will be the wittiest of the wittiest without substance, whole platform's opinion will tilt toward what's popular just for that sweet sweet gold(now can be cashed out!), and spez will still have that punchable face.
My initial thought. Whenever you do shit on reddit like sailing the high seas and doing some serious stuff. Once you opt in and be verified it can be linked back to you. No more masked on a account on who is behind this and that. Easy catch
"But there are concerns that programs like this can incentivize spammy posting, or 'engagement bait.' "
The cryptocurrency subreddit started this a while back with their Moons and it completely changed how the whole subreddit worked. The monetary incentive seems to ruin any sort of natural engagement.
Reminds me of the Behavioral Economics classic case of the daycare that started charging for late pickup. Instead of disincentivizing bad behavior, it assigned a price to a service which people became happy to pay, when prior they avoided doing it due to social stigma.
redditors need to earn at least 10 gold within a 30-day period — if they don’t reach the threshold, the balance rolls over. For users with between 100 and 4,999 karma, they will receive $0.90 per 1 gold. Once you earn more than 5,000 karma, you can earn $1 per gold.
So... how long before groups of accounts start colluding to upvote each other and generate revenue? like, less than minute? What will prevent bot accounts from upvoting to generate karma?
This can't possibly last more than month before it gets seriously exploited, at which point the company will have to refuse to pay out.
The title is a bit misleading but it doesn't sound like karma can actually be converted to real money.
Reddit gold is going to cost $2 to buy and awarding a user can give them $1 of that if they have over 5,000 karma. Between 100 and 4,999 it's $0.90 per gold.
And you have to receive at least 10 gold in a month to be eligible.
Edit: it apparently rolls over.
No they won't. You need to be getting 10 gold every 30 days. The only people who may get anything of value from this are people who own large subreddits that can set posts by approval only any time news is about to drop.
Super unpopular opinion but, I do think there will have to be some middle ground. All of us in Lemmy can see the issues with something beautiful and free thing like this. It exists only thanks to highly skilled people putting in ridiculous hours and the donations of a few folks but shuts down, has trouble scaling up etc.
If we want Lemmy to get big enough that the niche communities thrive, we'll probably need to figure out a way to pay the devs, probably moderators and if we want truly engaging content, the posters.
I don't know what that looks like but the flip side of the "there are only low effort memes and few good in depth discussions" is that we gwt what we pay for. If we don't want ads, some form of direct albeit minimal payment seems like an eventual solution.
Honestly I think the best solution would be what ISPs used to do. They would bundle basic email and usenet and web page with your monthly internet access account. You could pay extra if you needed more, either to the ISP or to a specialist provider. The ISP also helped you connect so non techies could still use email etc. More expensive providers like AOL would provide chat and forums too.
But we've stripped internet access to data access, basically web site loading. I don't think you fix it though because you have to be pretty techie to understand why you'd want a non ad based email provider, forget about why you'd want lemmy / fediverse or usenet, chat etc.
You can’t earn money this way using bots. Even with full control of an arbitrarily large set of bots, the best you can do is get out 50 cents for every dollar you put in.
Reddit announced a contributor program on Monday, which awards users actual, real money for their fake internet points.
Now, eligible users will be able to convert their Reddit gold and karma into fiat currency (no, not crypto), which is disbursed once per month.
So far, the Reddit contributor program is limited to users in the United States (to start, at least) who are over the age of 18 and can verify their identity via Persona and Stripe.
This feature was leaked about two months ago in Android Authority, when a reverse engineer found data about the program in an APK teardown.
To withdraw money, redditors need to earn at least 10 gold within a 30-day period — if they don’t reach the threshold, the balance rolls over.
Popular third-party apps like Apollo, Reddit is Fun, ReddPlanet and Sync have shut down after these changes.
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