Megathread for Reddit Blackouts and News - Day 3locked

alyaza [they/she]@beehaw.orgmod to Technology@beehaw.org – 190 points –

hey everyone. if you want to post links or discuss the Reddit blackout today, please localize it to this thread in order to keep things tidy! Thanks!

306

You are viewing a single comment

I for one, will most definitely not be doing this. Reddit was such a vital part of the internet during the mid-2010's to early 2020's... it would be a shame it all that history was permanently lost.

I will, however, likely not be going back. I've actually really wanted to take part in a decentralized social community like this for a long time, and I am very excited about what the federation brings to the table, and about the role that Lemmy fills in that network. In a world where the internet seems so much to focus on what is currently going on now, I reckon not contributing to Reddit anymore will have a much greater long-term impact than nuking my previous content, and will allow me to leave my piece of internet history intact on their archive.

There's an argument to be made that it's all been captured in the internet archive, but I still think that reddit gets most of its value from active users, not drivebys looking at posts from a decade ago. I'd rather those vital parts of internet history be findable in their original, SEO captured location, but I also understand the reasoning behind getting rid of all that and moving it strictly into internet archives. The thing is, the 2010s have taught us that the addage "once it's on the internet it's there forever" is patently false. The internet has turned out to be incredibly fragile with big chunks of history that wasn't archived going away forever. Our collective memories have been edited by companies going out of business and deleting all their cloud storage to avoid incurring further cost.

From the perspective of preserving useful knowledge, I wholeheartedly agree that it's a horrible thing to do. Especially when your comments relate important niche information rather than just being the millionth meme on the same template.

That said, I still edited everything (weren't too many niche info things on my account anyway), because I read a couple times that Reddit's big goal here would be to sell the immense amount of "real people conversations" to AI language model companies, thus possibly still making more money off what's already there even if no new content would be posted again.

PS: I have no idea how or why my phone did this but while typing, a popup suddenly came "Report Created!". If I somehow reported your (or any other) message here, please ignore this, whoever gets the report!

I've thought about deleting specifically noninformative posts

I had the same though. But then I started scrolling through my post and comment history and decided I'd rather do something else with my time than consider whether or not a comment I made will be exactly what someone searches for years from now.

But, I should add, that my valuable contributions on reddit are pretty few. I can see how that would be entirely different for someone who is/was incredibly active in answering r/AskHistorians posts.