What are people’s thoughts on how Reddit is coming out of this so far? How bad have things been for Reddit? Do we know how much their traffic has dropped and would a drip in traffic even hurry them that much. Why don’t we see talk of a new blackout at the end of the month?

  • UnmeltedByRain@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    All I know is I’m reading this in a third party app called jerboa using an account in lemmy. Neither of which I’d even heard of a week ago.

  • Lvxferre@lemmy.mlM
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    1 year ago

    Reddit Inc. itself lost really hard.

    For Reddit Inc., the winning conditions are to get share prices up to the roof, so when the IPO happens the current shareholders leave with their pockets full of money. However, everything that is happening shows:

    • That Reddit does not have multiple stable sources of income. The only main source of income will still be advertisement money.
    • That advertisement money will run dry, as users are leaving the platform or outright boycotting it.

    Both increase the risk and decrease the expected profit. Nobody is insane to invest in a company like this.


    For the community it depends on your goals.

    I count the situation as a big win; alternatives became more viable, Reddit as a platform will become less and less relevant, and the scummy company will lose lots of money.

    If however you expected Reddit to play nice with its userbase (e.g. reverting API price changes), then count it as a loss.

  • Xtallll@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    1 year ago

    Wait 2 weeks, about 20-30% of reddit users use a third party application, 1 July most of them are going to wake up and find they can’t, that’s when the shoe will really drop.

    • boff@lemmy.one
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      1 year ago

      I don’t think those numbers are accurate at all, so you have any stats to back that up?

      • HobbitFoot @thelemmy.club
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        1 year ago

        Third party apps are about 10% of total Android downloads. It is also theorized that the 10% are more likely to be power users than the Reddit average. 20% seems on the upper bounds of what I’d expect.

      • Xtallll@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        1 year ago

        My source is a post I saw on Reddit a few weeks ago but can’t find now. I give the reliability of those numbers a 6 out of 10 confidence rating.

    • MentalEdge@sopuli.xyz
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      1 year ago

      This. I don’t think the exodus has peaked yet. Nothing really changed to make people turn away, those of us who already found our way here, did so in anticipation of change. But that’s not how people work, most people will only seek an alternative AFTER their default way of doing something has been taken from them.

      The biggest wave is yet to come. (fediverse nodes plz no crash)

  • bee@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Honestly, at this point, it doesn’t matter to me. After ~12 years of Reddit, I was looking for an excuse to leave, and they finally gave me one. Even if the Fediverse is never as popular as Reddit, it’s already enough that I don’t feel the need to go back.

  • crowsby@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    It can be win-win. Reddit owns their platform and they can implement whatever enshittified features they want. Ideally that acts as a filter to keep the worst element of reddit over on that side of the fence where they can be happily monetized.

    Meanwhile the folks who prefer this more open-sourcey federated experience not owned by a Profit-Driven Company ™ are free to move here. Reddit owns their platform, but they do not own the community, and I’m looking forward to a userbase hopefully comprised of more thoughtful, intentional posters.

  • CookieJarObserver@feddit.de
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    1 year ago

    Its not over at all… And the damage the blackout did is currently not Measurable, but its high otherwise reddit wouldn’t be as furious…

  • Fisting for Freedom
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    1 year ago

    I think all of this is happening because the investors and VC people want to cash out asap, because the era of zero interest money is over and everything is falling apart. As far as they’re concerned, Reddit is valuable because you can sell it for a lot of money; if Reddit is important or valuable to its users, that’s entirely accidental fact that can and will be sacrificed to make an IPO happen (later this year).

    I think they win if they manage to get to go public, and so far none of this will stand in the way of that happening.