Remember when reddit was hip enough to have a canary system and now they don't even disclose hacks anymore. It's not the same platform. Good riddance.
I mean, to be fair they disclosed it immediately. https://www.redditinc.com/blog/sharing-our-findings-around-a-data-security-incident
Good point. Didn't notice that detail in the linked articles.

God I remember reading about Reddit's warrant canary being taken down.

I remember thinking that it was no big deal and it will always be the same.

How wrong and naive I was lol

it's so weird to me that dead canarys are not half as big a thing as I'd expect them to be
It's close to a decade that Apples Warrant Canary died, and still people consider Apple trustworthy with their data...
Apple may have quietly signaled that it's received a secret Patriot Act order

Language in a so-called "warrant canary" seems to have changed in the company's transparency reports

The Verge
I wonder if it's not so much that people don't care but rather that every big tech company will inevitably receive such warrants. Even if you don't use those services, most devices by default use the (probably backdoor-ed) NIST ECC algorithms.