this post was submitted on 07 Jul 2023
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Reddit Migration
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The really really sad thing is, Reddit could have done a half decent job and made a fair bit of money, but they decided on stupidity instead.
Sure, it would have upset some people a bit, but... Not by anywhere close to the same degree.
There. That's really not that hard. And people would have been much less upset at that, at least as long as the fees were actually as described, and not based on, say, how much they would like to make per user.
You'd probably want a free tier for 3rd party clients for users of specific account types. If the user is paying for Reddit Premium, maybe 3rd party clients don't get charged for API usage for that user account. Or if the user is a moderator for a given subreddit, API usage for that user on that subreddit is also free. With an API that the client can use to check the status of such things. If they were smart, they would also have a process for users with disabilities to have their accounts exempted from fees. That last one is hard, because you need a verification process, but it would get them a lot of good will.
Again... This shouldn't be hard. And it would have turned into a viable revenue stream!
Hell, flatly disclose that the 3rd party cost is 30% more than the average cost of using the standard client, to support the effort required to maintain the API. (Largely bullshit, but it makes those users more valuable than those that use the official client, while not being expensive enough to make it impossible for anyone to offer a 3rd party client at an even remotely sane cost.)
Yes, this would have very sadly been the end of free 3rd party clients... But I for one would have been... Okay with paying a small amount per month/year through the app store for a client that didn't suck.
Instead, Reddit decided that committing suicide was the better path forward.
If I have never used Reddit before and experience it the first time by seeing that I'm sure I'd just delete the app right then and there.
Spez demanded so much control ruining the app.
Or, like, I dunno… maybe explore pivoting the monetization model towards selling publicly available and scrapeable user conversations as training data for ML, since ML as a discipline is exploding now?
To be blunt, despite my dislike of companies using my data for that sort of thing, I did give Reddit shittons of comments over nearly a decade, so that’s on me. It has been available for public scraping pretty much since the inception of the platform. Spez could have worked with actual engineers and legal experts to figure out a legal, sustainable way to update the ToS and API to reflect that new monetization model, with honestly minimal disruption to any user.
But no - they wanted the quick cash grab instead of a sustainable long-term investment, because late stage capitalism, and now we’re here.