Reddit CEO Admits "we are not profitable" right before upcoming IPO
> How do you address the concerns of users who feel that Reddit has become increasingly profit-driven and less focused on community engagement?...
Reddit CEO Admits "we are not profitable" right before upcoming IPO
> How do you address the concerns of users who feel that Reddit has become increasingly profit-driven and less focused on community engagement?...
they fumbled so hard. they could have had millions of new subscribers if they locked the api key under reddit premium and allowed 3rd party app to enter user api keys
50 a year isn't terrible depending on your use case, but they burned so much good will
I'll have to disagree. Products being paid wouldn't have stopped
the internet becoming centralized around fewer and fewer services
forced those services to have had upheld their quality and promises
Cable TV started under the pretense of having no ads other than each network's own, and to have access to pay-per-view events (which is sports and we can stop pretending sports didn't sell cable).
And yet Cable, despite exploding more and more on widespread adoption, still became the same if not WORSE than public TV.
The paid-ternet would be the same or worse than what we have. And I know Facebook's dream goal is to make a paid-ternet. If I die and become a cyberghost, I'll haunt the hell out of any server rack where that goal is making progress and make sure it never succeeeds.