Thousands of moderators overseeing the site’s subreddits are on strike. It’s a wrinkle in Reddit’s plan to go public, and a sign that plan is premature, columnist Anita Ramaswamy writes.

  • WatTyler@lemmy.sdf.org
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    1 year ago

    I want all of the scabs and the naysayers to see this. Without the protest, without the exodus, without the blackout, we don’t have Reuters, one of the world’s most respected journalistic institutions, publishing disparaging info on Reddit’s IPO. The longer this goes on, the worst it gets for u/spez and any other rube who feels entitled to make tens of millions off of the backs of the community they neglected.

    • Casmael@geddit.social
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      1 year ago

      Lmao I didn’t realise the article was on Reuters until I read your comment. Pretty fucking funny man.

    • deweydecibel@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I don’t know, the actual tone of the article leaves a very bad taste in my mouth. The basic point seems to be that reddit should become more like a business and stop giving so much of itself to users and mods. In essence, it is exactly the mindset of this writer that got us to where we are.

      This writer fails to understand the exact same thing that spez fails to understand: the only reason that Reddit grew, the only reason that Reddit is valuable, is because for the last 15 years it has not operated as a business. Reddit could never become a successful one because in order to do that, all of the community power, customizon, and the inherent human element has to be stripped away and replaced with elements that turn profit.

      The only way to make Reddit profitable is for the users to (stealing a line from a blog post a few months ago) “stop talking to each other and start buying shit”, i.e. stop having genuine interaction with each other and start being dragged in front of other corporations that paid good money for the user’ eyeballs. And the moment that happens, Reddit stops being Reddit.

      This was a folly from day one. Spez thinks he owns a cow he can milk for years and years. Really, he just owns a pig, that he’s convinced himself will provide bacon forever once he takes the knife to it.

      • owenfromcanada@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        The funny thing is, Reddit might have had a chance to become profitable. If spez implemented a reasonable pricing scheme for the API (even charging two or three times what they’d expect to make from a user using the first party app–magnitudes lower than the proposed pricing), and if they made a few other adjustments, it might be profitable. They already had the advantage of not having to pay for moderation, which was huge.

        I think the pig is getting away though–he might not even get that first round of bacon.

      • Ulu-Mulu-no-die@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        You’re not alone, I too am angry at the writer, she doesn’t understand anything of what’s going on and why, most importantly.

        But there’s a positive in my opinion, the fact that the protest ended up on Reuters and that’s huge, if that doesn’t make investors aware I don’t know what else could.

    • Boabab@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      Yeah, I agree. I love the idea of u/spez trying to explain to the potential investors why so many users of the investment are working together to actively disturb and destroy the platform as much as they can, while being way more effective than users of pretty much any other other popular social media platform.

    • lunarshot@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      good! I more people see Huffman’s bottom tier communications. Reading his comments do not sound like the CEO of a company, it’s always very embarrassing, like he’s cosplaying what a kid thinks a CEO should be.

      • ptsdstillinmymind @lemmy.studio
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        1 year ago

        I am hopeful more people are starting to see that a vast majority of CEOs are conservative terrorists in human clothing. From Elon to Huffman all of them want to rule over the common person for their benefit.