There was time, way back when, that I might have agreed with this sentiment. Now, I see no benefits. It's literally poison for the mind, imo.Now, you can quit social media completely, but then you miss out on its many benefits.
There was time, way back when, that I might have agreed with this sentiment. Now, I see no benefits. It's literally poison for the mind, imo.Now, you can quit social media completely, but then you miss out on its many benefits.
There was time, way back when, that I might have agreed with this sentiment. Now, I see no benefits. It's literally poison for the mind, imo.
Interesting.
While I don't disagree that social media has a lot of drawbacks and is probably a net negative for society, I find - for example - the ability to get multiple informed perspectives on an unfolding real-world event in a matter of seconds to be incredibly valuable.
Even the best expert in the world can only provide you with one perspective, so to easily and cheaply get access to multiple informed perspectives is amazing.
Nothing like snarky comments about world events to gather and harvest karma points! Now granted, not all are that way, but there is a lot!!!
I stopped using reddit awhile ago and I am glad I did.
“any and all retribution”? I could see maybe losing a lot of users or money, but ANY and ALL? What if some deranged person took it upon themselves to physically harm him, you’d be ok with that over this?I’m here for this Robin Hood approach. Their CEO is nothing short of a tyrant who deserves any and all retribution.
Trying to rip off the 3rd party apps that made Reddit so popular isn't just trying to "become profitable".
Nearly every major news outlet covered this and answered this question when it happened. IMGUR charges $166 for 50 million api calls. Reddit wants to charge $12,000 for the same 50 million api calls. ...
As to your second claim, the posts by Selig I've read seem to indicate the opposite of what you said, but you are entitled to your opinion.
Is there any evidence of this? I've seen it mentioned in a post on a different thread about reddit and no evidence was given there either, just someone saying the same thing you are. I've just spend the last 1hr searching the internet and cannot find anything hence why my question.all I'll say is **** Steve Huffman, dude was literally a moderator on the banned r/jailbait subreddit...that should tell you all u need to know about this freak
Here... just because you asked, which is the first step - https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2023/06/api-pricing-protests-caused-reddit-to-crash-for-3-hours/ https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/202...ly-paid-amid-api-price-protest-plans-layoffs/Cool, shouldn't be hard to produce a source then.
Your definition of cesspool is very different than most peoples... lol.Macrumors is more of a cesspool IMO
If this is the case how is Huffman getting away with publicly defaming the developer of Apollo, RIF and Infinity based on complete lies?This country is a rule of law country. Blackmail has no standing.
I don't read MSM news.Here... just because you asked, which is the first step - https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2023/06/api-pricing-protests-caused-reddit-to-crash-for-3-hours/ https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/202...ly-paid-amid-api-price-protest-plans-layoffs/
"Reddit will charge $0.24 per 1,000 requests or $12,000 for 50 million. For comparison, Imgur charges $500 per month for 7.5 million requests per month or $10,000 monthly for 150 million requests per month, and Twitter charges $42,000 for 50 million tweets." (First Link)
"Selig said Reddit is charging $12,000 for 50 million requests, compared to $166 for Imgur. " (Second Link)
This was all over MSM weeks ago...
Is there any evidence of this? I've seen it mentioned in a post on a different thread about reddit and no evidence was given there either, just someone saying the same thing you are. I've just spend the last 1hr searching the internet and cannot find anything hence why my question.
The reason of him being a mod is very important given the blackout situation because being a mod/ex mod would give him insight into what it is like to be a mod and yet not a single journalist writing about him has mentioned about him being being a mod of a banned subreddit because given the current public focus of reddit right now, such information is clearly public information worthy but yet I've only seen the accusation of him being a mod of a banned subreddit here in MR. Maybe I am not putting the correct search words into the search browsers.
No one is against them charging money for API access. Its the absurd pricing which is in question here. I respect Twitter and Musk far more than Reddit and Huffman because Musk outright came out and said he wanted third party apps gone. Huffman states he does not want Reddit to be like Twitter and he wants to work with third party devs but behind the scenes is doing the same thing Musk didReddit hasn't done anything wrong. They're the ONLY social media company that hasn't been charging for API access. Just because people got used to something doesn't mean they have a right to that thing.
The overwhelming majority are just consumers of content. The users of third part apps are power users of Reddit and moderators who are entirely responsible for user generated content and keeping the subreddit free of spam and unproductive content. The official app lacks the features and the visual design which enabled the said content to be produced and moderated. Without the unpaid efforts of the moderators, every subreddit would become a cesspool. Forcing these guys away and installing puppets of the Reddit admin also wouldn't work because the people who made content just wouldn't accept these new mods.And an overwhelming majority of Reddit users do not care about or know who Apollo is.
Call out what you want, but the majority of users do not care and they were (some still) locked out of things they enjoyed because Mods decided to do that without support from the users.
Please, delete your Reddit account, post history whatever. Like the others you'll probably be back 2-3 weeks later.
Well then I envy you about your MSM comment. While my consumption of MSM has significantly declined over the last 7 years (because I believe it has declined itself significantly) I still check out WSJ, ArsTechnica, Economist, and a local news station here where I live.I don't read MSM news.
So, reddit is charging more than Imgur, but less than Twitter. Doesn't seem so outrageous.
A billion.. If you count bots, maybe. And I didn't say ONLY Apollo. I said third party apps.Apollo has 1.3 million active monthly users. Reddit has over a billion. Apollo didn't make reddit so popular.
Interesting.
While I don't disagree that social media has a lot of drawbacks and is probably a net negative for society, I find - for example - the ability to get multiple informed perspectives on an unfolding real-world event in a matter of seconds to be incredibly valuable.
Even the best expert in the world can only provide you with one perspective, so to easily and cheaply get access to multiple informed perspectives is amazing.
Or..... you can just stay off them? And let others who do find them useful.... use them.... Or should we just go ahead and get rid of everything in the world that you don't like or don't personally find useful?Reddit like all other social media platforms are toxic and useless. Good riddance. I hope they all die.
Or..... you can just stay off them? And let others who do find them useful.... use them.... Or should we just go ahead and get rid of everything in the world that you don't like or don't personally find useful?