• Yes, Reddit is a big dataset and yes, Reddit deserves to make some money off that if other organisations are going to scrape that data, for AI or anything else.

    That’s what they should be blocking and monetizing. Not those few users using 3rd party apps. Those folks (posters, mods) are amongst the ones creating that data set for Reddit, free of charge.

    They are right about needing to make money to continue as a successful business. But they are doing it the wrong way and alienating their key assets.

    Which is why I’m here :)

      • Ok. I’m about to abandon an account that’s 17.5 years old. I despise what reddit is proposing.

        But, honestly, how do you propose they turn (some) profit so it could last forever? Losing money isn’t a long-term recipe for success. I’ve got no problem with reddit seeking to profit. I’ve got a problem with their short notice and their refusal to let third party clients be part of the ecosystem they wish to create.

        • First I don’t see why reddit has to be a for profit organisation in the first place, since that’s kind of the rout of the problem. Users becoming a product that reddit is trying to sell to advertisers. At the same time if reddit would be respectful to users, creators and mods it would be a different story. But they are clearly not, they don’t respect the people who are making reddit work - but feel entitled to the fruits of their labor. That just irks me on a deeply personal level.

          My main problem is not even with the API decision but with the way the CEO communicated with the community.

          • COMPLETELY agree that reddit shouldn’t have developed in a commercial direction, but rather as a non-profit. That would avoided so many problems. That said, even as a non-profit losing money is not tenable.

            I also agree that how the CEO communicated is a big part of the problem.

            • Do we know they are losing money? Do we even know they are not making money? It is more likely that they are not making enough money to satisfy the stock holders and give big payouts to the principles.

              Generally an organuzation does not need to make money to stay in business. They do however need a positive cash flow and assets need to exceed liabilities generally or at least by enough creditors will not force bankrupcy. So profit is entirely optional. However for a typical stockholder company the profit expectations are unlimited.

                • Sure, but companies play very free and loose with the definition of “profitable”. Amazon and youtube have both also been said to be unprofitable, but both blatantly make a lot more than they spend. They just do shit like reinvest all profits into expanding the business or paying the board.

                  And capitalism, as it is now, is set up to demand increasingly more profits each year unto infinity - a flat, steady income for the company and its employees and board members is still seen as a failure. A company can be profitable (as in, made way more money than it spent), and they’ll still say it’s floundering if it didn’t make more profits than the previous year.

                  Companies are also currently raising prices and claiming they have to because of supply chain problems and inflation, while also making record profits.

                • And after all that has happened, you’d take what they say at face value? I certainly would not. I take “not profitable” to mean not as profitable as they would like to be to support whatever valuation they are targeting. As far as I know I’ve not heard that their cash flow is negative. It is negative cash flow that puts companies out of business and is the serious thing.

              • If I understand correctly they currently don’t have investers currently since they made this move as part of their attempts to take the company public, so there’s even less of an excuse.

                • They are a private company, not a public one. That does not mean they do not have investors. They have investors but they are privately held and probably private equity investors. I do not know exactly who or what investor groups own Reddit, but since it is a company it has investors.

        • Same. Late to the conversation here, but in the same camp. About to delete a 13.5 year old account.

          I’d be fine with Reddit making money, if they did it in an honest and predictable way. The way they’re going about it though is short sighted, deceitful, and completely unnecessary.

          They could make money hand over fist if they just tweaked their approach a tad, kept the community happy, etc.

          Bundle API usage in with Reddit Premium. Have it use upper limits of say 100k requests/month to the API. Anything over that and it’s on a per 10k/requests billing cycle sort of thing.

          Push the cost to the consumer, so if AI wants to scrape all the data, they can pay for it just like everyone else.

    • If they want organizations not to scrape their content, tough toenails; stopping them is impossible.

      It’s especially impossible to stop Google and Microsoft from doing it, because they already have a search index full of said content.

      Spez is alienating his loyal user base for nothing.

    • It was never truly about them not making money though was it?

      The whole thing would not have escalated, if they’d actually reacted to the problems raised, e.g. the astronomical API fees and the situation of mod tools and accessability tools.

      Only when shit was already hitting the fan they responded to 3rd party devs, who tried to reach out to them for a month already.

      Even if they’d postpone the changes and start listening to the raised problems now, they scorched a lot of earth and very well knew that would happen.

      • Isn’t it always about making more money? They don’t want 3rd party apps because they want more control because that allows them to optimize for more ad money. Now they can make even more money off their app by compromising the user experience, and users don’t have any other option to leave for a better client.

  • Genuinely don’t understand how reddit has failed to make money.

    Reddit’s entire value is based upon the unpaid contributions of its users- they generate and moderate all the content on the site for free, and these are the things that bring people to the site.

    How entitled must one be to think they can ignore all this and be fine?

    Also how tf is reddit not able to break bank?

    The functionality of their website was relatively simple - not underming the reddit devs here. The costs must’ve been minimal before the redesign and the dumb ass decision to host their own images and videos. Did they burn up all their money for the redesign and the shitty app?

    •  JZshark   ( @JZshark@beehaw.org ) 
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      861 year ago

      They’re bloated. Thousands of employees. Tons of developers. Marketing people. And in the end? The real product is like you said, it’s the users and volunteer mods.

      Those developers? Produced an absolutely terrible mobile app and mobile website.

      The marketing people? They’re more focused on NYC time square ads than fixing sponsored posts on Reddit.

      It’s an absolute shitshow but that’s what happens with these extremely bloated companies…

      • It’s amazing how much of this fallout could have been avoided if Reddit had just developed a competent mobile app at literally any point over THE LAST TEN YEARS. You had plenty of time Reddit. Posted from Jerboa, a mobile app which already works better for Lemmy than the official app for Reddit works for Reddit and was developed by one tankie in his spare time for peanuts.

        And yes I know I am talking from a regular user perspective and not a moderator perspective and I can’t speak to the mod capabilities of Jerboa, but I work in IT and have developed apps, it’s not that hard to pay someone to make a decent one or just buy out an existing one and don’t shit it up. The solution to this problem has been available for Reddit for literally years. Almost like if Huffman was a legitimate businessman instead of a tech bro who fell ass backwards into internet relevance, he would understand the concept of investing in the future rather than just doing nothing until a few months before IPO and then flinging shit directly into the fan in front of him.

          • Yep I had alien blue back in the day and it was essentially what Apollo is today (not quite as fleshed out as Apollo though). When Reddit bought alien blue I was actually somewhat excited because it was a great app. But they completely destroyed and tarnished it. I’m sure the dev who sold it (or was hired by Reddit, I can’t remember) is sad about it.

        •  Harold   ( @Harold@beehaw.org ) 
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          131 year ago

          They didn’t even really need need to make a better app to make more money. If the objective is getting the telemetry for ads by forcing the use of the official app, they could have the equivalent just via APIs and user-specific tokens. The backend would be key, and it would take advantage of an established app market. They could additionally monetize the API, if they approached it more reasonably. They could have the data and have developers pay a toll. Maybe hindsight is 20/20, but the animus they’re displaying here is self-defeating.

          • Yes, but then they would need to hire mature devs. I interviewed at Reddit a few years ago and the “staff” engineer was a smug 25 year old. Their engineering culture is one of elitism and a shocking lack of humility. IMO, the rot from the CEO goes all the way down. It wouldn’t surprise me if someone had your idea, but the organization is incapable of execution.

        • To be fair I don’t think it’s that he’s not ending of a “legitimate businessman”, I think that’s the way that all large corporations are and if anything he’s learned too well how to think like CEO.

          But yeah otherwise I agree with you.

      • Actually sounds like a pretty standard case of feature creep, the bane of all large scale software. A vicious cycle of trying to do too much, failing, and then needing more people to maintain all of the crappy code. All the while they can’t make any actual forward progress on things that do matter.

        Not sure why they had to blow up like that. At its core Reddit should have been relatively simple to create and maintain.

    • Because maybe there just isn’t a profit to be had in being a place for good faith discussions over text on computers. Its not exactly a hard problem for computers to solve. The hard part is moderation, and reddit the company never actually did any of that.

    •  ono   ( @ono@lemmy.ca ) 
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      It’s possible that this is not about collecting money for third party app use, but instead about forcing people to use Reddit’s apps (both mobile and web), which are designed for data extraction and tracking.

      • Ads already exist in Reddit’s system as a different subtype of the same entity that a post or a comment is. They could just… Present adds in the API call returns. And they could have someone doing regular checks to ensure that the app developers aren’t filtering out ads. This is so fucking stupid lol

        •  ono   ( @ono@lemmy.ca ) 
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          That wouldn’t give Reddit access to your phone’s APIs.

          Android permissions required by Reddit 2023.23.0:
          • android.permission.ACCESS_NETWORK_STATE
          • android.permission.INTERNET
          • android.permission.READ_MEDIA_IMAGES
          • android.permission.READ_MEDIA_VIDEO
          • android.permission.READ_MEDIA_AUDIO
          • android.permission.READ_EXTERNAL_STORAGE
          • android.permission.FOREGROUND_SERVICE
          • android.permission.ACCESS_WIFI_STATE
          • com.google.android.gms.permission.AD_ID
          • android.permission.POST_NOTIFICATIONS
          • android.permission.WRITE_EXTERNAL_STORAGE
          • android.permission.READ_SYNC_SETTINGS
          • android.permission.WRITE_SYNC_SETTINGS
          • android.permission.WAKE_LOCK
          • android.permission.ACCESS_COARSE_LOCATION
          • com.android.launcher.permission.INSTALL_SHORTCUT
          • android.permission.VIBRATE
          • android.permission.PACKAGE_USAGE_STATS
          • android.permission.USE_BIOMETRIC
          • android.permission.USE_FINGERPRINT
          • android.permission.RECORD_AUDIO
          • android.permission.CAMERA
          • android.permission.FLASHLIGHT
          • android.permission.MODIFY_AUDIO_SETTINGS
          • com.google.android.c2dm.permission.RECEIVE
          • com.google.android.finsky.permission.BIND_GET_INSTALL_REFERRER_SERVICE
          • android.permission.RECEIVE_BOOT_COMPLETED
          • com.reddit.frontpage.DYNAMIC_RECEIVER_NOT_EXPORTED_PERMISSION
          • com.android.vending.BILLING
          • android.permission.BLUETOOTH
          • android.permission.BLUETOOTH_CONNECT
          • com.sec.android.provider.badge.permission.READ
          • com.sec.android.provider.badge.permission.WRITE
          • com.htc.launcher.permission.READ_SETTINGS
          • com.htc.launcher.permission.UPDATE_SHORTCUT
          • com.sonyericsson.home.permission.BROADCAST_BADGE
          • com.sonymobile.home.permission.PROVIDER_INSERT_BADGE
          • com.anddoes.launcher.permission.UPDATE_COUNT
          • com.majeur.launcher.permission.UPDATE_BADGE
          • com.huawei.android.launcher.permission.CHANGE_BADGE
          • com.huawei.android.launcher.permission.READ_SETTINGS
          • com.huawei.android.launcher.permission.WRITE_SETTINGS
          • android.permission.READ_APP_BADGE
          • com.oppo.launcher.permission.READ_SETTINGS
          • com.oppo.launcher.permission.WRITE_SETTINGS
          • me.everything.badger.permission.BADGE_COUNT_READ
          • me.everything.badger.permission.BADGE_COUNT_WRITE
  • “Reddit represents one of the largest data sets of just human beings talking about interesting things,” Huffman said. “We are not in the business of giving that away for free.”

    Wow. Clearly Reddit now believes that they own all of the conversations that people have had on the site. That explains why they’ve also been restoring comments that people have deleted when leaving the site. That has major implications for data security, privacy, and even safety in some situations.

    This episode has revealed Reddit’s true colors, and they’re not pretty.

    •  araquen   ( @araquen@beehaw.org ) 
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      351 year ago

      When something is free, you are the product. Reddit has been a human farm for ages, using effectively “slave” (free) labor to maintain the herd. That massive data trove is now being sold for profit. That’s why it’s so important that Huffman preserve Reddit and is kicking recalcitrant mods (something I predicted would happen).

      I admit, I unsubscribed to Reddit and logged off the day of the AMA, after giving Huffman a piece of my mind about his “double dipping.” I was fine paying him for no ads. I would have been fine paying Apollo a small subscription. There was no way I was going to pay Reddit AND Apollo for the use of Reddit, when Apollo was basically going to be forced to collect the money I was already paying Reddit (using the APIs as a blinder).

      I am fine leaving behind a ghost account. And while I get the idea of taking your data with you, frankly, I am not a thought leader in any space, and most of my comment history are stray tidbits across multiple subreddits. Certainly nothing of any value. The only value I have is being someone who could have eyes on to ads, or interact with an ad, and that can’t happen if I’m not there. And I fully believe that there is more harm to cause by being inactive than in not being there at all. Huffman may have 400 million accounts, but how many of those are actively engaged? What if the number of inactive accounts keep growing?

      Let u/spez be CEO of a graveyard of rapidly aging data and ghosted accounts. For those who have contributed, I think the best solution at this time is to get your knowledge archived in a searchable format and then just pick up elsewhere. Yeah, there will be work to re-grow the community, but I have found that folks do migrate to where the activity is. As subreddits go quiet, folks will look for where the action is. It’s what happened with MySpace and Livejournal, LiveJournal and Facebook and Facebook and Twitter. Reddit is no different. Nor is Twitter. People just forget and get complacent. Personally, I like to shake things up anyway. It’s time for change.

      • I keep my account and deleted every single comment or post I’ve made. If you have ever follow any thread, seeing a [deleted] comment is infuriating even if it turns out to be insignificant info. I want to maximize my departure’s effect and that’s exactly what I wanted.

        •  Freeman   ( @freeman@lemmy.pub ) 
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          I have been having to rerun my deletion scripts daily. They are actively restoring comments. Even after writing gibberish and deleting. They are now holding more than 1 backup.

          • Make a GDPR request to delete your data. Use a VPN to be in Europe, how are they going to know if you are or not a EU citizen? Are they going to risk the GDPR fines assuming you’re not a EU Citizen currently traveling in the US?

            •  Freeman   ( @freeman@lemmy.pub ) 
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              111 year ago

              They definately log IPs. I’ve gotten warnings for voting on a post, switching accounts, and later voting on the same post I stumbled on before. They can probably see that pattern.

              Either way it’s fine. I’ll keep running the script. It’s all JavaScript so no api needed. And let them burn compute time on restores.

              • They log IPs. but your IP has nothing to do with you nationality. And GDPR does’t dicriminate wether you’re standing in the EU or US but if you’re a EU Citizen. If you make a GDPR request, they can A) Ignore it and risk getting a pretty bad fine B) Say “fuck it im not going to risk it” and delete your data. I guess getting on a VPN in the EU might also help the case. I would do it that way because if in 30 days some of my comments are still there, I can report them and they take that shit seriously and the fine is pretty bad.

        • That’s not a bad point. I still get the occasional reply notification from comments many years old, from people who were looking for a conversation on a topic and engaged with what I said a decade ago.

          I suppose it would be somewhat impactful if those comments were just empty voids, perhaps even moreso if they were all replaced by a message saying something like “I left reddit because of X, look for me on the feddiverse to continue this conversation.”

          • All of my comments that I can access have been edited and left in place. Every one is now simply

            “Deleted: I refuse to let Reddit profit off of my content when they treat their community like this”

      •  poctz   ( @poctz@beehaw.org ) 
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        61 year ago

        So if, as he stated earlier, “These people who are mad, they’re mad because they used to get something for free, and now it’s going to be not free,” shouldn’t mods start charging for their services?

    •  Freeman   ( @freeman@lemmy.pub ) 
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      What I find interesting is this could be avoided by granting exceptions to the existing app devs and being done with it.

      I get the api costs money and theres folks like pushshift aggregating data and using it for their own profit. I’m sure plenty of companies are using data for adverts and more. And there’s an argument there Reddit deserves a cut. Especially if they are using the api to train bots or ai to have conversations for their own inventions.

      But just the ass backwards way they handled devs of existing 3p apps that constitute value add to their data sets is just…mesmerizing.

      And if these users ARENT a majority of the usage or costs, why bother cutting them off and not just granting exceptions to avoid the PR issues.

      • I think you misunderstood spez. He wanted no 3rd party app at all. RIF was paying Reddit for using their brand name and spez terminated the contract. It’s all about control.

        It would be much easier to just inject ads into data returned by the API. Apps will automatically display these ads and developers will understand that if they filter these ads, their access to Reddit will be either limited or completely cut out.

  • “Huffman said in an interview that he plans to institute rules changes that would allow Reddit users to vote out moderators who have overseen the protest, comparing them to a “landed gentry.””

    I had to google Landed Gentry, it still don’t make sense; “The landed gentry, or the gentry, is a largely historical British social class of landowners who could live entirely from rental income, or at least had a country estate.” That’s a weird way to describe an unpaid moderator. Either way, there’s no reddit to return to if they’re going scorched earth on the moderators anyways. This is home now.

    •  bspar   ( @bspar@beehaw.org ) 
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      I saw somewhere that the analogy was supposed to be “whoever got there first owned the land.” The idea I guess is that the landed gentry settled down on the land (subreddits) first, and now the subreddit is a dictatorship because the users could never vote on who their “landlords” are.

      Yes, that analogy is also terrible, and it also goes to show that spez has no idea why people hate landlords.

      Edit: everyone that’s replied to me has provided more reasons why it’s a stupid analogy, and that makes me happy :)

      • But that analogy would make Spez the king who rules over all the lands of Reddit-tania, doling favors out to people who support him and punishment out to those who oppose him no matter what the people of Reddit-tania want.

        Wait, maybe the analogy has some merit to it after all.

      •  fuser   ( @fuser@quex.cc ) 
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        61 year ago

        in practically all cases, the “landed gentry” were not there first - they mostly obtained title to their estates via political manipulation and legal skullduggery or, if they could get away with it, outright slaughter of the previous occupants.

      • Admins, yeah I could see this definition fitting admins, but I’m lost as to why moderators are lumped into that lol. I’m not sure how a vote would go, especially if past users decided not to return for the vote. Honestly have no idea what reddit’s environment is like after the blackout.

    •  poctz   ( @poctz@beehaw.org ) 
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      Just saw a comment regarding Twitter’s troubles:

      Last time I checked, if a company has more than 12 creditors — as Twitter does — then any three of them can join together to put a company into an involuntary bankruptcy proceeding. And Elon is in danger here. At some point, the creditors he is mindlessly stiffing on a regular basis are going to get sufficiently pissed to throw Twitter into bankruptcy.

      • Honestly this is the silver lining of Elon buying the company; endless entertainment from watching the smoldering wreck. I do feel bad for the folks that were actually getting value out of using Twitter before his acquisition, but it’s fascinating to see Twitter constantly finding new ways to fail to meet everyone’s already-low expectations.

  •  walkingears   ( @walkingears@beehaw.org ) 
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    Amazing that he can’t think of a way to make money that doesn’t involve alienating the unpaid people who keep the place running.

    I haven’t abandoned Reddit entirely, but I’ll never use the app…downloaded it once a year or two ago, and deleted it within an hour because it was ugly and confusing. I honestly think maybe the next phase of the protests, for those who still are active on Reddit, should be mass deletion of the app and using only the desktop site/mobile browser version. The API thing was meant to force people onto the app, so mass organizing to delete the app would hit them where it hurts.

    •  CeruleanRuin   ( @CeruleanRuin@lemmy.one ) 
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      Is there any metric measuring that, though? Of course they track app downloads, and can tell if people are using it, but I don’t know if there’s any way for them to know who is actually keeping it on their phone. A mass deletion wouldn’t mean anything unless it’s by people who were already using it daily. Giving it a low rating on the app store might be seen though.

      • Yeah it would have to be mass deletion by people who use the app regularly, which (should) lead to a measurable reduction in traffic and ad revenue, assuming that those people would spend less time on reddit if they didn’t have the app handy on their phones constantly anymore.

        • Apps usually have an active users metric. As far as I know, that’s how the worth of apps is usually measured. So uninstalling the app would directly impact that metric, because they would see a significant drop in their daily active users measurements.

  • The craziest part is these people are volunteers and were the entire reason his stupid site worked to begin with. Why go to war with them? They can just walk away, they never got anything out of this to begin with. And why would anyone new join up if the previous generation is being treated this way? Just super mysterious behavior overall.

  •  BrooklynMan   ( @BrooklynMan@lemmy.ml ) 
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    “Reddit represents one of the largest data sets of just human beings talking about interesting things,” Huffman said. “We are not in the business of giving that away for free.”

    I mean holy shit dude. Do you listen to yourself? Where did that “data set of just human beings talking about interesting things” come from? It came from millions of people who gave you that content for free. And many of them used the site through third party apps because those apps made your site much more useful without charging you a dime.

    The entitlement of Huffman is astounding.

    He got free content and free app development work and now he’s going around whining about how “we’re not in the business of giving that away for free.”

    Yikes.

    🤣

    also:

    Huffman is engaging in the cardinal sin of the internet: trying to charge for something that has always been free. And acting as if he’s entitled to that money, and it’s the people who don’t want to pay who are the problem.

    And, again, Huffman seems like all entitlement all the time:

    “They need to pay for this. That is fair.”

    I mean… the users of Reddit could just as easily turn around and say the same thing to Huffman for all the free labor, content, and data they’ve provided to him.

    Reddit is dead

    • I mean genuinely if your charging for access to the content I have created then I am I entitled to a portion of your revenue. Same as Adsense on YT not that I want to turn it into a race to the bottom for engagement like those scenarios are conducive to. But if we want to make it about money we can make it about money /u/spez.

      If I were an executive and If I was even 2% clued into the effect this is having on shifting the conversation to fediverse type projects I would be shitting myself. Not because this will have an immediately noticeable effect on my bottom line, but that it will continue to grow organically. We already crossed the threshold of momentum needed to self sustain, its all up from here especially as the tools and systems mature.

      Just look at the tech literate around us start to question “yeah why the fuck are we leaving social media in the hands of corporations???”

      • I’m cynical as ever, but I think it’s a cash out.

        There’s not a better incentive to build a better product when they ran most of the independent boards into the ground, leaving them at a relative high.

        I don’t think there’s a universe they can compete with free when interest is going up. All the reversals and user hostile policies are going to drive people away, how quickly that bothers Hoffman, the board and ohanian is probably just a matter to how quickly they can unload through the IPO.

        • I agree, and the hard pivot outwardly over policies and the near antagonistic stance the admin team has suddenly taken has got to be a precursor to something we not be aware of yet. Spez feels like a willing scapegoat to make a few million as he parachutes out when it blows up. They will use him to implement the unpopular decisions, get it “profitable” leading up to the IPO then remove spez and bring in a populist type CEO to smooth over the dissent. Maybe give better tools, act like they give a shit but not actually roll back any changes.

          We know this tactic as its something wall street does all the time, and something reddit specifically has done before as well.

  •  Salamander   ( @Sal@mander.xyz ) 
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    301 year ago

    “Reddit represents one of the largest data sets of just human beings talking about interesting things,” Huffman said. “We are not in the business of giving that away for free.”

    🤮