• @infotainment@lemmy.world
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      61 year ago

      Exactly – this is almost certainly bad for Reddit’s business at this point. The problem here isn’t necessarily capitalism so much as it is a egocentric CEO gone mad with power.

      • @SpaceToast@mander.xyz
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        11 year ago

        I don’t even think it’s a bad business decision.

        Most people didn’t use 3rd party apps to begin with. I’d guess about 75% of the vocal minority who protested, will continue to use Reddit.

        And a very small % of people will quit Reddit in favor of Lemmy.

        • @infotainment@lemmy.world
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          31 year ago

          I’d argue it is, because of the damage they’re doing to their brand.

          I’ve said it in a couple other threads, but Reddit has other ways they can monetize their 3rd party app users, such as requiring subscriptions to use third party apps, or even by simply giving third party app devs a longer lead time to change to a paid model. Instead of doing either of those things, the CEO had a tantrum and alienated a bunch of people.

          • @LachesKid
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            11 year ago

            It was pretty abrupt. One cannot help but wonder how much money the CEO has at stake, personally, in rushing things.

        • Spaceman Spiff
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          11 year ago

          Doesn’t have to be Lemmy, they just have to stop using Reddit. If the power users (posters, content creators, mods, etc) really do leave, then the regular users will likely lose interest and leave as well. It doesn’t matter if they go to Lemmy, TikTok, or start spending time with their loved ones again.

          There are rumors that Reddit will start using (more) bots and AI to generate content, which is certainly not beneath them at this point. The tech equivalent of a lava lamp.

          • @SpaceToast@mander.xyz
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            11 year ago

            I suspect that power users, like mods, are more interested in the “power” they have on Reddit than standing up for anything.

            I’d love to be wrong though. Reddit can’t die fast enough.

            • Spaceman Spiff
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              11 year ago

              Some definitely are. They’re the ones that folded as soon as Reddit threatened them. Others are holding strong, knowing they will be removed. Others, like the ones posting John Oliver memes, are really just trying to feel like they’re in power. They won’t do anything to actually get in trouble

      • @applejacks@lemmy.world
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        01 year ago

        Yea, I am not a capitalism enjoyer, but it’s comical watching people insert their favorite pet politics as the sole reason for everything that’s happening.

    • @zombiepete@lemmy.world
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      11 year ago

      What’s good for making more money is not always or even often good for what we would think of as customer-friendly business. If you can wring more money out of a few whales at the expense of pissing off customers who don’t create as much revenue, then in our current system that’s what shareholders apparently want.

      Reddit wants more users in their official app where they can target them for ads, sell NFTs, and whatever other bullshit they want to sell. It doesn’t matter if the experience is worse, and it probably doesn’t really matter if a couple thousand 3PA users split for good. As long as they can tell investors that the official app use is growing and that they can target a greater percentage of users with ads and data, they feel like they won.