Yes, I feel long-term damage will be more interesting. If there are viable alternatives, people may migrate over, a large part of the reddit community still knows what happened, and I doubt that with the current CEO that reddit will succeed long-term
The viable alternatives exist, and we're writing on one of them.
In my opinion, maybe Lemmy or Kbin won't be the final replacement, but in the long run Reddit will be replaced. And spez was the beginning.
The fog of war clears, Google searches point to once useful forums. The libraries have been burned down and what goes with it a wealth of knowledge lost to time.
At what cost, though?
Yes, I feel long-term damage will be more interesting. If there are viable alternatives, people may migrate over, a large part of the reddit community still knows what happened, and I doubt that with the current CEO that reddit will succeed long-term
The viable alternatives exist, and we're writing on one of them.
In my opinion, maybe Lemmy or Kbin won't be the final replacement, but in the long run Reddit will be replaced. And spez was the beginning.
The fog of war clears, Google searches point to once useful forums. The libraries have been burned down and what goes with it a wealth of knowledge lost to time.