Electronic Frontier Foundation shouted out Lemmy, Kbin, and Mastodon in their Reddit coverage today: What Reddit Got Wrong

dirtmayor@beehaw.org to World News@beehaw.org – 366 points –
What Reddit Got Wrong
eff.org

From the article:

"Moving to the Fediverse

This tension between these communities and their host have, again, fueled more interest in the Fediverse as a decentralized refuge. A social network built on an open protocol can afford some host-agnosticism, and allow communities to persist even if individual hosts fail or start to abuse their power. Unfortunately, discussions of Reddit-like fediverse services Lemmy and Kbin on Reddit were colored by paranoia after the company banned users and subreddits related to these projects (reportedly due to “spam”). While these accounts and subreddits have been reinstated, the potential for censorship around such projects has made a Reddit exodus feel more urgently necessary, as we saw last fall when Twitter cracked down on discussions of its Fediverse-alternative, Mastodon."

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How and why did Reddit think copying Twitter's API pricing mistake was a good idea? And why charge Apollo $20 million?!

Like that's just a cricket bat to the face.

They're betting that the masses are too baked in to care. Reddit's CEO said it himself, they're counting on this to blow over. The best message you can send to them is to delete your reddit account and in the box that asks why you're doing so, tell them you're leaving for lemmy. Encourage your communities to follow you. This has happened one before with us old-timers who remember the Great Digg Migration. (Interesting internet history read if you have time.)

Probably analyzed the Twitter population before and after the API change, and it seems Twitter survived, so they wish to replicate this.

Surviving is a pretty bad metric, especially for social media. Digg "survived". So did MySpace, Tumblr, and more. It's too soon to say about Twitter, but their future (in general) doesn't look very bright. They aren't going to disappear, but they also aren't going to be the cultural powerhouse they used to be.

More importantly, the move needs to be profitable. On the surface, it is- 3rd party app users don't currently bring in money. Converting any of them at all to paid or ad-viewing users yields a net profit, if you keep a narrow focus.

Having these users active and engaged on your platform has a value as well, but one that's really hard to quantify.

Part of me thinks they were planning on using the high rate as a negotiation tactic. Ask for twice what you want, then back down to your actual number.

Then the Apollo dev "miscommunication" happened and things got ugly. Maybe they'll still back down, but maybe they'll die on that hill.

The other part of me thinks they just want to kill 3p apps and this is the easiest way to do that. Just price them out. They probably had some accountant or MBA crunch numbers on how many people would leave vs how much more revenue driving people to their ad ridden hellscape of an app...and figured it was worth the bad press.

Hell, they probably saw what Netflix just did with account sharing and were like "they got more subscribers!!!".

I think we are witnessing the beginning of the end of Reddit. It will be slow at first then all at once.

Because their intent is to force people to use their native applications. They're intentionally making it difficult/impossible for third party apps to exist. They're wagering that their clout surpasses the bad-will they'll get for the crummy move.

Then they can bombard everyone with "he gets you" ads or whatever the most recent ad garbage is, and get their full revenue.