Article is very biased towards Reddit the Company, and actively paints the protesting mods as being the sole instigators of the protest, calling them "super mods" which has a negative connotation, and makes no mention of the fact that many users and communities are also in support of said protest. It also paints the protesters as immature by positing the "question" of will the community "let [reddit] grow up", implying that the protesters are stifling the growth of reddit. It is very sympathetic towards spez and calls the reddit community "rambunctious", as if the reddit community are children, and only quotes negative examples of notable things the reddit community has achieved. It writes of the protests as if it's a child's temper tantrum that will go away with time.
The article paints the death of the Apollo app as the main reason for the protest, other than the one line of "Old-timers were also angry that the heady days of Reddit’s anticapitalist roots seemed to be officially over.", which is inaccurate. It makes no mention of the many other reasons the community is unhappy and protesting, which includes, among others:
It also doesn't state the true reason why people were upset about the death of Apollo and other 3PAs, which is that those apps had the accessibility features and moderation tools that the official reddit app should have had but doesn't, and the loss of these 3PAs means that the already back-breaking job of moderation is only going to get harder. It makes no mention of the fact that the unhappiness over the API pricing was due to the ridiculous price and the short time frame, instead painting these "apps like Apollo" as leeches that "send no money back to the company".
tldr: article is very biased toward spez, making him seem like a sympathetic parent trying to control his rebellious children, generalising all protesting mods as bad "super mods", and does not mention the real issues of the protest.
The protests have definitely made some sort of impact, even if it's not the initially intended impact. It has drawn media and public attention to the situation, it has dragged reddit's reputation into the ground, and it has exposed Reddit the Company's true colours and intentions for everyone to see, including the casual user who may not have cared about the API situation in the first place. Whether this has been for the good or for the bad is debatable. IMO we are now watching the disintegration of reddit in real time, and a few months later, after everything settles, reddit will still be here but it will no longer be the same. We have seen this happen before with Tumblr, Digg etc. And the Fediverse will grow and expand, and with some luck and effort, hopefully it can become something great.
Thanks! Subscribing to communities/magazines in other instances has always been a bit complicated, so this easy step-by-step is really useful.
I'm definitely spending more time on lemmy than reddit nowadays. Reddit still has too many great resources and info to abandon completely, but with more time to grow, hopefully lemmy will eventually replace reddit for me.
Kinda sucks, but after reading their and other people's posts and comments, I guess it's just their decision to help them in better moderating their community. Hopefully when things get calmer and everyone talks it out, we can refederate with them one day. I'm not a mod of anything so I can't really talk about that aspect, but it seems that mod tools are lacking in lemmy in general, but then lemmy is still pretty young and has lots of room for improvement.
Recommendations and reviews about everything under the sun from actual users and not sponsored ad reviews.
Recommendations and reviews about everything under the sun from actual users and not sponsored ad reviews.
Not just with reading, personally I have this problem with hearing, more so than with reading. If I'm not actively concentrating, stuff really just goes in one ear and out the other, bypassing the brain competely. This is why I can't multitask while listening to podcasts or audiobooks, because it just becomes white noise.
Not just with reading, personally I find it happens more with hearing for me. If I'm not actively concentrating, stuff really just goes in one ear and comes out another.
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