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  • macracanthorhynchus@mander.xyz
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    1 year ago

    I think reddit has just continued making more and more moves down their path towards the IPO, and all of those moves together have shown a lot of us that we’re not interested in staying on for the rest of the ride. Complicity towards corrupt or powerhungry mods of massive communities with tangible effects on the world (e.g. r/politics), censorship, revenue-focused anti-user actions, ignoring the community, downplaying the value of volunteer mods and threatening to replace them… Yeah, thanks, no. I’m good over here in the fediverse now.

  • DigiWolf@pawb.social
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    1 year ago

    I’m seeing a lot of worrying trends.

    The whole idea of Reddit is changing. It used to be the front page of the internet and that encompassed basically everything. Now it seems like there’s a lot of focus on making it advertiser friendly

    Then we see Spez basically spitting in the face of the community. Mocking them, calling the unpaid mods “entitled” and just showcasing that he actively seems to despise the users.

    Now we’re seeing Reddit do shady stuff like undelete comments. Destroying any trust the community may have had in the website.

    The 3rd party app issue was just the kindling that ignited all the other issues

    • panopticchaos@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      His open anger has been pretty surprising, I feel like the past year has seen more and more of the owner class going totally masks off with anger when the peasants don’t just get in line to follow orders.

  • manifex@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    I put a lot of effort into my communities on reddit. Watching the platform make efforts to be more palatable to investors pre-IPO made it feel less of a community-based platform with ads to a clearly for-profit entity. I cleared my history and left.

    If you also wish to, I wrote a quick HOWTO: https://sh.itjust.works/post/114629

  • Parsley@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    I’ve been wanting to boycott Reddit for a long time, and the list of problems I had with it was very long. It took this API issue to finally get some community action.

    But in short, Reddit is moving away from genuine community, and more towards fake astroturfed corporate content with manipulated comments and unabashed bot activity.

  • Ghostalmedia@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    IMHO, the big challenge with what’s happening at Reddit and Twitter is that sensible people with reasonable asks are leaving the platform.

    The only people that are left are people that believe the CEO’s disinformation, or just don’t care. So now you have a more extreme echo chamber.

  • blackbrook@mander.xyz
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    1 year ago

    I am and always have been against walled garden internets, and against corporations owning and controlling what essentially becomes a part of people’s culture. I let myself get sucked into Reddit despite that without thinking about it, largely because a 3rd party app shielded need from the shittier consequences of that (like ads).

    Watching spez display his true colors has just served as a reminder of why it’s not okay to build your communities somewhere that is at the mercy of a corporation. There’s just no way I’m going to support something controlled by someone like that. It’s a matter of principle now.

    It’s disappointing to me how many people don’t seem to see it as a matter of principle, or else don’t see a principle as being worth any inconvenience, or being willing to give up anything they have gotten used to at Reddit.

  • Kichae@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    My concern about Reddit – and my reason for being here – is primarily around the distorting effect of profit motivation. That distortion comes as changes to sorting algorithms, changes to search, and the hiding of communities critical to Reddit or the endeavour of profiting off of other peoples’ opinions, creative works, and labour. So yes, I have some concerns around censorship.

    It’s worth noting that I don’t have the same concerns around censorship here, though. Centralization and corporate control is my concern, not specifically that certain people feel entitled to an audience that doesn’t want to listen to them. People are free to find their tribe here, and the rest of us are free to not pay any attention to them.

  • Rottcodd@lemmy.one
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    1 year ago

    Yes and no.

    Broadly, at this point, I couldn’t care less what Reddit does. This is my new home.

    In the weeks leading up to my move here though, it wasn’t so much that I was concerned about the third party apps specifically. I did use one - RIF - and the official app is complete garbage, so it would’ve impacted me negatively, but it was more than that. And yes - the certain increase in censorship was another issue, but still, it’s deeper than that.

    Both of those things, and much more, are really just aspects of the process that Cory Doctorow has called enshittification, and that’s the thing that drove me away. And if I was still on Reddit, that would be the thing I’d be concerned about.

    So it is the case for me that it’s not just about the third party apps, and that censorship is also a concern, but really those things, in my estimation, are just signs of a deeper, underlying issue.

    Which I no longer have to care about.

  • jimmyjazx@lemmy.one
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    1 year ago

    Guy is acting more and more musk-like, that’s enough for me to bolt. But I did exclusively use RIF app for last ~13 yrs. Whenever a Google search took me to native page I was shocked at how unusable it was on mobile

  • nevernevermore@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    There’s always been a tonne of censorship on Reddit, tho? Admin and to a lesser extent Mods have unchecked power to delete and even edit whatever they so please. user and subreddits get banned, shadowbanned.

    My problem is different from everybody else’s here. I’m not bitter towards Reddit, I can watch it thrive in different hands from the sidelines, I don’t need it to crash and burn. But it’s a repository of information that’s almost second-to-none and my fear is embittered redditors scorching the earth before they bail.

    Anecdotally, this evening I had an issue with my Plex server (HEVC main 10 videos maxing out CPU usage for transcodes, I digress) and searched my problem. Lo and behold 95% of qwant searches returned reddit threads, and the plex subreddit is still set to private.

    I defend people’s rights to do what they want with their data and delete their histories on their way out—but damn if it isn’t going to hurt a little in the short term. reddit has helped me problem solve a million things, I’d hate to think that someone after me searching the same problem couldn’t find a solution.

    • spunker88@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      I can see why people who volunteered their own time to put together informational posts and tutorials don’t want Reddit to benefit from them. I just hope they copy those threads into a new post on one of these Lemmy/kbin sites, but sadly that probably won’t happen.

      The loss of information like this is nothing new. When Geocities shut down, a lot of Web 1.0 era sites were lost forever. Various internet forums have shut down over the years taking all of their old posts with them. Link rot is another issue with sites like Imgur deleting old content. This is why sites like the Internet Archive are so important. They are the library of the internet.