causal UK is back open.
causal UK is back open.
reddit mods being reddit mods are just desperate to hang on to their little bit of power.
I can understand not wanting to have the community that they built taken away by force. Sucks though
Gotta be honest, I assumed it already was. I've genuinely not had the urge to visit Reddit in days.
Victory!
@leaskovski feedly is worth a look
Greetings from upside-down land. Here’s a copy-paste of the sticky:
The mod team have always refrained from joining in Reddit activism but we felt strongly enough to join the API blackout to try to preserve the apps that drew us to Reddit initially. Our roles in this community will become more difficult as a result of this policy change, and accessibility for users with special requirements is severely lacking on Reddit's main application.
It is clear to us from Spez's leaked email that he remains unabashed by the pushback from the communities and is resilient in pushing forward with the policy change. With communities much larger and much more imposing than CasualUK dropping out of the blackout, it has started to feel like standing in front of a dam with a sieve.. The whole time, the thing that really suffers is this community. There is an enormous support network in this subreddit for those who need it, and we want to continue to encourage and foster that spirit. This has always been a refuge from the goings on around the rest of the platform and we do not with the userbase to suffer as a result of Reddit's determination to close the third party sites.
We apologise unreservedly to those who think we should remain offline indefinitely, and we welcome those who want just want a place to talk about their day, or to mention if someone has done a shit in your bin.
There is an enormous support network in this subreddit for those who need it
It's literally a meme sub where people laugh at tabloid articles and britishisms.
To be honest, that's how I feel about /r/casualuk and politics rule.
(Not going to share a political take don't worry mods), but everything is inherently political and so banning it feels disingenuous.
It was always going to happen. Big companies like this make unpopular decisions for business reasons. In some cases there's an outcry, and for social media sites that outcry is amplified by the simple nature of the site, but it always dies down.
Most people simply don't give a shit about this stuff and Reddit will make more money from the 90+% of people who remain then those who left anyway.
My only hope is that shearing off of some customers is enough to make this a sustainable community here in the same way that happened for Mastodon.
My all time favourite subreddit hands down.
But as soon as my GDPR subject access request has yielded my reddit data to me I'll be deleting my account there and saying goodbye to 9 years and half a million fake internet points.
It definitely feels freeing and lemmy definitely feels more involved, more intimate, and less shitty.