Reddit CEO tells employees that subreddit blackout “will pass”

Nilesse@beehaw.org to Technology@beehaw.org – 36 points –
Reddit CEO tells employees that subreddit blackout “will pass”
theverge.com
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Hate to by the pessimist, but he's not wrong. Most subs will open back up tomorrow, I doubt most will close again. The users that aren't on board will jump ship, but a greater percentage will likely just grumble and complain while they continue using the service. It's what they're banking on.

They're not getting me back. I doubt that will affect their bottom line much, but it's all I can do.

For me the benefit of the various mismanagement crises at Twitter and now reddit is that they push enough people to alternatives to create a critical mass there. Mastodon will likely never be what Twitter was, but enough interesting people and enough of my professional network now have a presence on the latter that it's become a viable alternative for me. Same thing here. Whether or not Lemmy ever reaches reddit's proportions, there are enough interesting links and discussions here to keep me occupied. And if not, I could probably stand to spend a bit less time on social media anyhow.

I agree completely. Also, I mentioned elsewhere that I feel more likely to actually contribute to this smaller community. I've already made more posts (2...3 maybe?) in a week here than I did in the last 2 years on Reddit. When you don't feel like you're shouting to 3 million people who aren't listening, it's more fun! It's hard to really talk to anyone when you don't know anyone at the party right? Is that enough analogies? I feel like that's probably enough...

It's crazy how the smaller scale effects interaction. I'd never post on Reddit, never comment and rarely vote but here is feels like it has more..impact? Not sure if that's the word but it feels different for sure