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Reddit communities with millions of followers plan to extend the blackout indefinitely
(www.theverge.com)
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What reddit doesn't seem to get that for many people old.reddit (or a 3rd party app) is reddit for them. If they take that away they're forcing them to learn a new UI or to get a new app. It's naive to think that everyone is just going to switch to the official ones. Might aswell find an alternative to reddit and learn to use that.
It's not just about learning the new interfaces...I've used the new site design and have heard the official app is just as bad about shoving ads down our throats. Baconreader made ads at least fairly unobtrusive, but with all the drama I've decided: fuck it. I appreciate Lemmy and other decentralized options for being user-funded rather than reliant on corporations