Libreddit (and sometimes teddit) are essential to me now to watch reddit content without getting into reddit. But I wonder if they will keep working, mostly since Stealth on android won’t keep working after.
~~They have been working on an alternative method to get data from Reddit but it isn’t merged yet: https://github.com/libreddit/libreddit/pull/819
It seems like they’re waiting until July 1st to advance.~~
This is inaccurate. They won’t ship this in an official release due to legal issues. The current plan is to allow instance operators to set their own API key.
It looks like the method they’ll be going with for legal reasons is to allow instance operators to use their own API keys. This might be a good solution if you self-host your own private instance (easy with docker on a home network, no domain name required) with low traffic, but the Reddit API change will probably kill the larger public instances with many users, as those will definitely have traffic over the API limits.
Right, I missed where the dev said:
More importantly this code will unfortunately likely never be merged due to legal issues
Public instances will easily hit the 100 requests per minute restriction on the free tier. Some apps like RedReader are exempt from the new restrictions, I wonder why they can’t use their API keys in the meantime but maybe it’s more complicated than that.
The dev apparently used the RedReader app to test a “spoofing” method of access for a proof of concept, but they don’t want to use that method either, because it would potentially cause problems for RedReader, which they didn’t want to do:
If we do that, and cause a huge traffic boost under RedReader’s name, it might lose them their exempt status. I’d like to avoid that if I can - there’s no reason to paint a target on RedReader’s back unnecessarily (an independent, non-commercial app), especially since the equivalent can be done with the official app without the same risks.
The real problem for Libreddit instance operators is going to be acquiring an API key. It doesn’t look like it’s an automated process like most other services - you have to fill out a form, which opens a ticket, and wait for someone from Reddit to get back to you.
I run an instance, and I’m not sure I want to go to the trouble. But I’ll wait and see what happens.
Oh great
Crazy, I wonder how the slaughter of meta will look like. Twitter was hard, reddit was super hard. We’ll see a lot of blood.
Unfortunately for us, Zuck is actually a little savvier than these other idiots. Just as unethical, but sharper. That’s why his company is doing well and you don’t hear about him all that much unless you’re into tech news.
Or he’s cage fighting Elon Musk or something.
My mom killed it about a decade ago.