@caseynewton The AMA would have gone infinitely better if he had just been blunt but honest, and simply said that this is about clawing back revenue because Reddit needs to start making money, and that he’s sorry but third-party devs never had an inalienable right to Reddit’s API.
People (including me) would still think it was wrong and unfair, but it would have blown over a lot faster and people would still have a modicum of grudging respect for him
@EpiphanicSynchronicity @caseynewton
Yeah, honesty would have played better. Now we're left with a bunch of yammer where something doesn't track. I smell a cleanup prep to flog themselves to the LLMs for money (while claiming the opposite of course). Not to say the LLMs haven't already got there, but this prepping IPO by backstabbing the communities and the ecosystem so abruptly is vile.
On top of that, from a user standpoint the Reddit app is unusable. Since they won't let RiF live, and they're acting all sneaky, I deleted every post I ever made on my 10yr old personal account (took hours over the weekend), and on my 3 yr old professional account. Logged out and won't be going back. It's not nearly as jarring as the Twitter migration since I've been on Mastodon now since last December. Hopefully, kbin can spin up some more bandwidth to handle the load.
The act of jumping social media ship is getting easier.
@caseynewton Any thoughts on the inconsistencies in what Huffman seems to say is the issue versus what they're actually implementing?
For example, there's zero chance that Apollo itself costs "tens of millions" to support, but Huffman seems to be maniacally focused on Apollo. He also seems to act like the $500k/yr Apollo makes is somehow a material amount to Reddit.
@caseynewton If you do end up actually getting someone at Reddit to talk, maybe ask them why Huffman's plan to double workforce 2 years ago culminated in this nonsensible product strategy.
@caseynewton I read all 13 of his AMA answers and... they're bullshit? None of it holds any water at all. How is setting a price so high that no one will pay it going to generate revenue? What happened to their live video streaming? What happened to their NFT wallet? Why do their ads suck so much?
Also, are you familiar with https://www.reddit.com/r/beta/ ? Good window into the actual problems people have.
@caseynewton Apologies for spamming your mentions, but I found this quote from the leaked memo today particularly interesting:
"The only long term solution is improving our product”
I'd love to know how the API changes lead to that, in their mind, because that's the 3rd "strategy" we’ve heard in the last couple weeks.
@caseynewton Excellent writeup!
Slight nitpick: As far as I'm aware, only *non-commercial* accessibility apps are/were being considered for exemption. Which excludes (a lot of?) the most commonly used ones.
@caseynewton Employees with stock options who want to build a nice nest egg for themselves, shareholders who want the company to drive real growth and value, and customers who want a smooth, consistent service less dependent on their own data to drive revenue.
These things run incongruently with free API calls for all. There's two sides of the trade, and if third-party app developers can find another platform that drives value for them, they should go there.
@itsonlybrad @caseynewton These third-party apps would have a tough time stomaching any cost because the amount of revenue they pull in for themselves is small and Reddit got jipped on the basic cost of entry.
Listen, I agree that those apps are objectively better in many ways, but charging an amount that would make sense for their developers and their users would mean Reddit makes an insufficient margin on this. I highly doubt that charging less would have garnered any less outrage.
@caseynewton
> And I imagine this all feels particularly galling to users who already have deep misgivings about their work being used to train AI models over which they have no control, and from which they themselves will see no financial benefit. It’s one thing to build an advertising business around your users’ posts — and quite another to package those posts up and sell them as a SaaS product.
Well said! No need to imagine. That's how I feel.