The /r/videos mods are going all out and someone made this lovely graphic to explain why subs are going dark next week.

While I’d love to have my users on Lemmy, I also hope that this actually does something for Reddit and they reverse course on their planed changes.

  • It’s nice to hear that so many subreddits and mods trying to do something about this… they can see the brick wall that Reddit’s owners are about to plow into, and are trying to steer the site away from probable destruction. If they’re dead set on selling Reddit though, I’m pessimistic about whether or not they will care enough to course correct at this point. Maybe it got their attention when Fidelity cut their valuation by 41%, but the lack of any response so far despite significant backlash has me thinking that perhaps they don’t intend to respond. Regardless of whether that’s their intent or not, they’re certainly sending the message that they don’t care. I wouldn’t be surprised if they take whatever paycheck they can get, abandon the ship and have zero concerns when it sinks on someone else’s watch.

    • I’m sure 3rd party app usage is low. It’s probably only a tiny minority of users who even know they exist. They’re betting they can drive however many of us do use 3rd party apps back onto the 1st party one, and increase ad impressions at a time where social media advertisers are pulling away from Twitter.

      Ad revenue going up would mean stock valuation increasing, and that bag they’re grabbing getting bigger.

      Once they go public, it won’t matter. They’ll have already cashed out. They’ll be playing with somebody else’s money then.

      • It’s probably only a tiny minority of users who even know they exist.

        Probably, but it’ll be the power users, mods and regular contributors who are most likely to use the apps that need the API to operate correctly.

      • I see what their calculation with driving 3rd party users to 1st party is, but I really feel like it’s such a suit decision. 3rd party users tend to be power users, so driving even a fraction of them away disproportionately affects content. I think the loss of that content is going to outweigh the hypothetical gain of them looking at ads, because everybody agrees, 3rd party users are a tiny percentage of total users.

        I don’t think this will kill Reddit. At least not lights out instantly. People are being hyperbolic. The kinds of people who scroll r/all won’t even notice. That page is repost bots and corporate and political propaganda, it won’t change. What I think will happen is the quality and amount of content on competitors, like Lemmy, will rise as displaced power users settle. If enough power users settle in one place to create critical mass, that creates competition.

        Of course this discussion is like talking into the wind, as neither you or I have the ear of people making the choices at Reddit.

        • No, it won’t kill Reddit overnight. It might not even land a fatal blow, and Reddit could live a long life going forward. But it will make this place a truly viable alternative for the average (or maybe moderately above average) user.

          In the other hand, if their API fuckery actually kills useful or entertaining bots…