this post was submitted on 12 Jun 2023
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Technology
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I mean, it's worked until now lol. Probably should have fixed it, but I can understand why the higher ups wouldn't want to.
Reddit has had extremely spotty reliability forever. It got better in recent years, but still came down every few weeks, or would just randomly say "you broke reddit!". Circa 2015 every evening it would just randomly return 50x errors a good chunk of the time because it was always overloaded.
Backend reliability mustn't be very high up their priority list. Well, neither is UX (old OR new reddit), and let's not pretend that they've been masterminds when it comes to ad placement either, so the real question is what do the higher ups want, and why can't they achieve it?
They want money, and they've tried nothing and are all out of ideas.
Honestly even this year it hasn't been super reliable, even before any of this. Stability has never really been a top priority for them.