• Abso-Freking-Lutely is not going to answer random questions like an AMA. He will anser some planted questions and then will dissapear, and tell some news organization or make some tweet about how he had to leave early because of all the negativity and the bridaging and the people swearing at him, and how we would have loved to stay otherwise and answer real questions.

  • He has serious guts to be doing an AMA.

    Unless he’s using this opportunity to repeal the API changes or officially resign as CEO and put somebody more competent in charge, I don’t see this going well.

    Spez should honestly learn to read the room.

    • I wouldn’t be shocked if there is only comments from suspiciously young accounts that get addressed, posts like “How are you so brave to get up lead us to the promised land every day sir?” and “I don’t have a question, I just want to thank you for saving me from the scourges of NSFW posts”, while all the real questions are silently absent.

    • I partially agree with you that he’s got guts, but I think more so that you hit the nail here:

      Spez should honestly learn to read the room.

      I think there may be something genuinely not right with his sense of social awareness. I’m not a doctor psychiatrist, etc., but when I read the post today from iamthatis about Apollo shutting down, the quoted text that came from spez really felt defensive to me.

      • They don’t need it to. They just need to have enough clueless investors for the IPO and snazzy graphics to mislead them enough so they aren’t looking at what is actually happening that Reddit is actually imploding.

        • Being a realist, I wouldn’t say Reddit will implode from this. A lot of people just come for the memes and don’t really give a shit about BaconReader, Apollo, Reddit Is Fun, etc.

          What it will do is drive far more people towards Reddit competitors. Lemmy instances in general have seen far more signups lately, and Tildes has exponentially increased in active users.

          The part I’m worried about is what happens if Spez does the unthinkable and backs down.

          Some of you may remember a Reddit clone called Voat that grew during Ellen Pao’s brief tenure as Reddit’s CEO. It was once poised to be the Reddit successor but was quickly abandoned due to server issues and Ellen later resigning. Voat nearly died, was resurrected by becoming a bastion for white supremacists when they were driven off of Reddit months later and survived for a few more years…

          As for how Voat was near the end of its life, imagine nearly every comment being filled with offensive slurs…

          • I think it’s a little more complicated than this: Reddit needs power users to make its ecosystem work. Mods of course, but also content creators and content, hem, reposters, who keep large communities active and interesting. If a significant enough fraction of these people give up on Reddit, the users who want funny memes will go get them from 9gag or wherever is most convenient for them.

  • Even before the API debacle, Reddit has had some serious issue, and every one of those issues is u/spez. He can’t just fight his way through this. The incentive to leave has always been there, and now he’s pushing us over the edge, and he’s gonna try to win us back with some empty words.

    • I dont get why hes doing it at all. There is no universe in which this doesnt end completely poorly, with nuked comment chains and tons of down votes. I expect a ton of users to get banned, and it would be very surprising if spez answers anything other than pre planned questions

      I haven’t seen Reddit this upset, collectively, since Ellen Pao. Doing an AMA is just going to throw gas on the fire. I dont see the play hes trying to make

      •  Clbull   ( @Clbull@beehaw.org ) 
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        11 months ago

        The sad thing is… Ellen Pao did nothing wrong. All she really did was ban /r/FatPeopleHate. Victoria’s firing was Kn0thing’s doing but everybody threw Ellen under the bus for it. Oh, and she was trying to fight for keeping Reddit as a free-speech platform too.

        It’s amazing how sheepish the Reddit community truly is when everybody came back to Reddit the moment Pao was forced out.

        She really didn’t deserve the nickname ‘Chairman Pao’, especially when Spez was the one who pushed far stricter censorship measures, made ban-evasion a site wide offence and gave moderators so much power to abuse.

        On the plus side, it’s good to see a Reddit alternative that isn’t either dead, a closed-garden like Tildes, or a white supremacist hellhole.

  • Reddit CEO, u/spez, will be here tomorrow to host an AMA about the latest API updates, including accessibility, mod bots, and third-party mod tools.

    Note how they somehow left out 3rd party apps. Just mod stuff and accessibility.

    Probably a typo.

    (But really how many corporate meetings and emails were passed around to agree on that copy you think, it’s gonna be lawyers all-hands-on-deck tomorrow, probably one of the most expensive AMAs ever with all of those billable hours)

    • I agree with your parenthetical strongly enough to rule out a typo.

      This announcement lists things that Reddit will humor, for now, and as a way of cheaply outsourcing niche and difficult problems. It clarifies that everyday third party apps were never intended to have a future with the platform. They’re simply an obstacle for Reddit’s most convincing path to revenue.

      I might even have forgiven Reddit if it had said so up front, but the story they’ve been trying to spin – with prices that just happen to be orders of magnitude in excess of anything devs might afford – is outrageously insulting. I’ve never had my trust in a brand demolished so thoroughly so quickly.

    • I assume that’s because their goal is to outline why third-party apps won’t be needed. The whole point of this drama is that Reddit wants to get rid of the third-party apps, so they are going to do everything to try to convince people why not having them will be fine.

      • Yeah them bringing up disabilities, I have a feeling we’re going to see some half-ass disability fixes come in in the next week. Let’s see them get through a full ADA audit (as a software dev who has done that it suuuuuuuucks. It’s needed, but we’re talking months of work

  • It’s pretty much guaranteed that AMA is going to go over very, very poorly. It doesn’t take a genius to figure out people aren’t happy about this! I’d think of this as a “why bother” situation usually but I get the feeling spez is looking for attention/validation.

  • Man, this whole API thing really makes me think of how much of a shithole the web is, still after all those years.

    I basically have to buy a keyboardless laptop with an awkward resolution if I have to buy a smartphone, all because the software for it is less than optimized crap that mostly just spies on you for the sake of ad revenue, and then leaves garbage all over the system it barely ever cleans up. A wonderful package for a multi-core, multi-threaded CPU paired with at least 3 GB RAM (if that’s even enough today) that you almost certainly can’t use with any comfort to browse the web because almost no one who pays big money to their devs cares that these devs build a proper mobile version of the website - which is part of nearly every webdev interview anyway, and for what, just to make me download the app anyway? What a fucking joke, honestly.

    Web on desktop is just as much of a disgrace for all the bloat.

    • Funny you mention the resolution because in the 90s we had 640x480 which was way smaller than what cell phones have now and we still managed to have very functional web. Yeah the fonts weren’t as pretty and pictured had jagged edges but it worked and it was great!

        • I don’t understand how or why modern interfaces have less information density than in 1997 on 640x480.

          Or why they are less customizable.

          Someone said the use just the middle of the screen display is based on some studies of what people can actually read or take in, but I don’t think I agree (hacker news isn’t as limited and it works for me). But why not have 60 percent of our physical screens display off white blank space. /s

      • I was actually trying to call out basically every smartphone out there because they have to be packing multicore CPUs with at least 3 GB of RAM in order to be functional.

        My current phone has 2 GB, and almost all of it is dedicated to the Android system itself, even without any shells (i.e. not MiUI or anything like that, which is basically Android OS plus something on top, eating up even more resources), and can be really painful to use at times. I seem to have won some performance back by switching to Via browser instead of the native Google Chrome, YMusic instead of the native YouTube app, and RedReader for Reddit (might kiss goodbye to that some time soon, as we all know) - the rest of the applications I use either lack a proper mobile version of the website (viewing some with the desktop option on is horrible), a lightweight alternative, or both. I also don’t have the memory to download every single app for the websites I use as they keep suggesting - more importantly, I don’t want to.

        When I’m on PC, I use the web applications available for nearly every single thing I use - but oh no, I can’t do that on mobile, I need an app, which I’d have to update frequently, wasting even more space with the piss-poor solutions they go for in the name of profits.

        Damn I’m getting worked up talking software and especially the mobile world.

  • What’s the betting he’ll back down in some way (which was the plan all along)? That way they’ll get what they originally wanted but will look as if they’ve “listened”.

    I’m not sure I believe that will happen though, tbh.

    • I would put money on that not happening at all. The suite of changes this time are exceptionally broad and seem 100% targeted at public investment. They can’t back-down on deciding to go public, and they can’t really go public with some of these things in place.

      • Yeah I don’t expect anything to happen either. The big “blackout” having a predetermined duration of 48 hours is a joke. Reddit can just sit it out and be done with it. After reading the farewell post of the Apollo dev it also seems like Reddit is doubling down on their pricing model with no leeway.

    • My bet is that they’ll announce that they’re still charging for the API, but at a “drastically” reduced price. As you say, I think it was their plan all along. That way they can still milk third party apps, all the while still being able to say “we listened to the community” by not destroying them outright

      • I just don’t get why they were doing per api call to the app at all, instead of a subscription to reddit for the users. I might have paid a bit to keep using redreader and avoid ads.

    • I don’t think they will, but even if they did I kind of suspect the apps will still shutdown, they all announced their shutdown at once, I am sure they discussed amongst each other and reached a line in the sand with reddit. If I got that sort of treatment, even if they backed down I’d never trust them again, I’d never want to work with them again and I don’t see how that sort of situation is tenable. So they could completely abandon the changes and still have achieved the result they want. However, at this point they’ve already vilified themselves to those who will ever care, so there’s no reason to back down at all.

    • Right? There’s no way in which this doesn’t end poorly for them. Nevermind that they started this debacle by shooting themselves in the foot, they just keep gleefully shooting it even more, it’s insane. Either the investor money is such a huge pressure that they don’t care, or they just completely lost touch with reality. Or both.

      I’m gonna grab some popcorn tomorrow, this will be a cool friday night tragic comedy to watch.