Reddit runs an experiment on its mobile site currently that prevents logins if a mobile web browser is used.
Some Reddit users have noticed that they can't sign-in to their accounts anymore on mobile, as the option to do so has been removed for them. Reddit has made it difficult in the past for users to access the site on mobile in browsers. The company's main intention is to get users to use the official Reddit application instead.
Damn, Reddit must really not want me back. If I can't use Boost or at least the mobile version of Firefox with ublock installed there is no way I'm going back. Thankfully I'm quite happy on Lemmy and don't really miss Reddit.
Itâs like they actively want to drive users away. I know a lot of people have said this, but it really feels like Reddit is about to have its Digg moment.
They want to push everyone on their apps because they collect a ton of metrics that they can easily resell. Metrics are way harder to collect on browsers in a consistent fashion.
Honestly seems like a lot of major sites are imploding. Stackoverflow's mods are striking, Twitter is on a downward spiral and likely to go bankrupt this year, Reddit is axing itself, etc.
It'll be interesting to see what ends up happening to the internet after. I think a return to more niche forums or community-run things like lemmy is unlikely to be fully mainstream, but I think enough folks will shake off the major platforms onto these to get them really active.
Perhaps this will mark the end of an era. Running a social media company requires lots of money, and making it profitable is very hard unless you leach data off everyone. Perhaps investors will learn that there are better ways to make money.
I checked out the official reddit app just out of curiosity. What a shit show. It felt like half the posts were ads or "recommended" posts. Spent a whole 5 minutes before deleting. Relay or nothing.
Is anyone else also been gettin loading errors on Apollo since yesterday? Iâve stayed off since then but seems like they are already messing with API access already.
Nah, the dev already said they're not shutting down the ApolloApp subreddit because it's how he's communicating with everyone (per his most recent post on there). It wouldn't make sense for him to shut down the app.
I saw this two weeks ago. I had a few days where I thought I was going crazy because there was no "log in" link in the header, just a more obnoxious "open the app" button instead.
After a few days I did see the log in button again, but I had already accepted the fact that I'd only be allowed to use their mobile app and convinced myself I'd close my account (which I subsequently did two weeks later)
I used Boost and Apollo a couple of years ago. The feed wouldn't update and there were minor glitches. The only thing I liked was the ability to download videos, but it was glitchy too. Maybe they are better now.
I assume they want people to avoid using mobile browsers to bypass ads. Which, I'm done with reddit at this point. Just shooting themselves in the foot at this point to drive away the very thing that keeps them afloat, free content.