@IncognitoWolf idk, none of what's going on right now tops the fact that spez thinks it's okay to shadow-edit other users' comments to make it look like they said something that they didn't. like that's just a fundamental human line you don't cross.
Reddit Migration
### About Community Tracking and helping #redditmigration to Kbin and the Fediverse. Say hello to the decentralized and open future. To see latest reeddit blackout info, see here: https://reddark.untone.uk/
I'm sad to see that most of the subs I frequented are up and running now like nothing has happened. That's not how you protest by a long shot.
@SirMrR4M I have looked at the front page here and there, and it's a shell of what it used to be. There are users and repost bots just doing their thing, but the quality seems far less, and the interaction has dropped. I think the full scope of what's happening won't be apparent for a while but the effects have now created more viable alternatives to reddit by boosting interaction on those platforms. Reddit just fueled their own competition.
Many of them were forced and or had their mods replaced or threatened to do so
Wait till RIF and Apollo (and other third party apps) shut down at the end of the month
@Weirdmusic if it's anything like Twitter (and it seems the same playbook is being used) then the only impact will be on the creators of the 3rd party apps (both by the end of their subscription revenue and more critically people requesting refunds on existing subscriptions). The company "owns" the infrastructure containing the content so assuming the integrity of the backups isn't breached then no amount of scrubbing with remove it (although EU legislation may claim some of it). Therefore it's only a question of time before things return to "normal" and the IPO can proceed. Reputational damage is the only thing that will really have a chance of derailing it.
@markrprior I have my doubts that things will return to normal. Reddit has only promised mod tools and they haven't delivered on that promise. Until that time, moderators won't be able to run their bots to help moderate their respective subreddits properly. Until they deliver on those moderation tools, the subreddits are going to be in disarray. How long before users decide it's not worth it any longer? Reddit may somewhat recover from this, but I highly doubt they will entirely recover.
IMO it's a death knell (albeit a very long, drawn out death). Once public, that's when the real changes are going to occur that will sour the user experience, and it will be over the course of several months...even years. Then (as is shown in this case) investor/shareholder return becomes priority. The C-Suite won't care about the user, because once public the user is the product.