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Social network Reddit recently began blocking mobile visitors to its website while pushing them to download the official Reddit app, and it's fair to say that the move is not going down well with users.

General-Apps-Reddit-Feature.jpg

If you visit reddit.com on your iPhone today, you may see a new popup that can't be dismissed, asking you to "get the app to keep using Reddit."

A Reddit spokesperson told Ars Technica that it was "a test for a small subset of frequent logged-out mobile users that prompts them to download the app after visiting the site." They continued: "These users are already familiar with Reddit and we've seen that the experience is much better for them in the app. The app offers a more personalized experience and users can more easily find communities that match their interests."

Users have since taken to subreddits like r/bugs and r/help to voice their displeasure at being blocked out of the website on mobile. "Are my days of anonymously browsing over?" asked one user.

Futurism's Victor Tangermann wrote about the aggressive ad last week, suggesting the change was the latest indication of the platform's "******tification" – a neologism coined by author Cory Doctorow that describes tech companies deliberately degrading their services in order to maximize profit.

Despite consistent user growth and 121 million daily active users, Reddit has struggled to find a path to monetization since it went public on the stock exchange two years ago. The site's principal revenue is advertising, which explains the push to log users into its mobile app, where it can consistently track their activity.

In 2024, the company also signed a controversial contract with OpenAI that allowed the ChatGPT maker to train its AI models on user-submitted posts. (It's currently in legal battles with Perplexity and Anthropic over alleged unlawful use of its data.)

Over half the population of the U.S. visits Reddit each week, according to the Financial Times, but most of that discovery comes from Google searches, which suggests the so-called "front page of the internet" is walking a tightrope between monetizing interactions and stifling engagement growth.


It's not the first time Reddit has alienated some of its users. In 2023, it stopped letting users opt out of ad personalization. Then again in the same year, ahead of its IPO, the company started charging developers for accessing its API, which led to the shutdown of several popular Reddit clients, including Apollo.

Article Link: Reddit Starts Blocking Mobile Website, Pushing Users to App Instead
 
I miss using Reddit. I was shadowbanned for 'technical irregularities' because I posted in a short period of time from my old ISP (Cox) and my new ISP (AT&T fiber) on r/ATTFiber asking for help setting up my new home ISP. It didn't seem to like my posting from multiple IPs in quick succession. I've probably filled out appeals form 100 times since October and no reply.
 
Yes, it's all about ad revenue. I read The New York Times using Safari on my iPhone. Every so often, I get a pop-up that urges me to read the story in the app because "it's better." I subscribe to the Times and I don't want to be subjected to constant ads, which I can block with Safari. The app would prevent that. So it may be better for the Times, but not for me.
 
Had this on my phone too. But I didn't download the app and it disappeared a few days later. If it had stayed it would have been the end of reddit and me. I'm still salty about the killing of r/all to feed me more algorithm-based content I don't care about.
 
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Ironic linking to Xitter in this post since it does almost the same thing. It doesn’t usually outright block viewing the post (yet) but it purposely makes it as painful as possible to use on the web / logged out / especially both.

And yeah reddit was doomed the second Huffman took over. What he did to Selig in particular and how he did it told me all I need to know.

At least he’s consistent.
 
I miss using Reddit. I was shadowbanned for 'technical irregularities' because I posted in a short period of time from my old ISP (Cox) and my new ISP (AT&T fiber) on r/ATTFiber asking for help setting up my new home ISP. It didn't seem to like my posting from multiple IPs in quick succession. I've probably filled out appeals form 100 times since October and no reply.
You likely won't get one. I was banned from a subreddit because someone misread a post I made thinking it was spam, and when I explained how it was on topic they just ignored me. About six months ago I realized I wasn't getting much value from the site I couldn't get other places so deleted my account. Haven't missed it at all.

Ironic linking to Xitter in this post since it does almost the same thing. It doesn’t usually outright block viewing the post (yet) but it purposely makes it as painful as possible to use on the web / logged out / especially both.

And yeah reddit was doomed the second Huffman took over. What he did to Selig in particular and how he did it told me all I need to know.

At least he’s consistent.
X required you be logged in for about a week before realizing it broke most of the way people access their xeets, so they recinded.
 
Reddit has been dead to me since they killed Apollo and other third party clients. Since then it’s become the primary source for AI (lol) and the general post quality seems to have diminished significantly, even niche subs seem to have lost their older, more technical users.
 
I had a Reddit account for years, well before the Digg exodus, with hundreds of thousands of karma. I only say that to illustrate how heavy a user I was, and as soon as I found out about the AI training, I deleted every single comment and post I ever made and deleted my account. They can kick rocks.
 
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"These users are already familiar with Reddit and we've seen that the experience is much better for them in the app. The app offers a more personalized experience and users can more easily find communities that match their interests."

“You don’t need options or a preference: we’ll decide your experience for you.”

What a crap, condescending response. The spokesperson who made that statement in most times in history would have been fired.

Maybe I don’t want a more personalized experience?
 
Safari's "Hide distracting items" is your friend folks
Reddit has worked around this, mainly by deprecating their mobile web experience.

Hide distracting items seems to work well for 90% of mobile websites, but Reddit seems hell-bent on tweaking the experience to make you go use their app, out of frustration.
 
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