I was expecting some humility, admission of faults and an olive branch.
Instead, the CEO just doubled down and comes to the AMA with canned, smug responses. What a joke.
I was expecting some humility, admission of faults and an olive branch.
Instead, the CEO just doubled down and comes to the AMA with canned, smug responses. What a joke.
I commend the shutdown but if things get out of hand reddit admins will take over the popular subs. They won’t let a prime sub get shut down by mods.
Reddit is losing it’s most precious users: power users, technical users, veteran users, etc
Open sourcing won’t do much because the value of reddit are its users, not the code.
They would have to join the fediverse to rebuild to trust but of course there is 0% chance of that because their focus is $$$.
I agree with you that the feeling of no keymaster if very liberating.
Spot on. Lemmy is how the Internet was supposed to be.
Charging for APIs is not the problem, the problem is the deceitful, smug and bad faith approach to it.
Same. Using Lemmy is like a breath of fresh air.
Same. Their values, attitude and disregard for users is the problem.
It works be nice if there was a way to verify that a user is the same one across Lemmy instances.
I wish signing up was easier for non technical users.
I understand the need for approving new sign ups but this can be off putting for new users.
I’m using Firefox on mobile. A dedicated app would be cool but the web experience is really nice, much better than reddit’s mobile site.
At this point in time, reddit cares about numbers, not competency. It doesn’t matter If a sub (or the entire site) degrades over time, as long as IPO numbers are maximized so they can cash in.