“We’ve known for over a decade that people come to Reddit to talk about the products they love – take r/BuyItForLife for example, a community of over 1.5 million redditors who have been sharing recommendations and advice about their lifelong, must-have purchases since 2011. These updates will uplevel the search-and-discover experience for both brands and our users by tapping into our differentiated value as a hub for actionable conversation”
Reddit will lose at least 25% of its user base after June. Hopefully more, but realistically, older audiences won’t understand or make effort to move off it.
> older audiences won’t understand or make effort
I wouldn’t be so sure about that :P
When I was a kid personal computers didn’t exist, when the internet came I was already working full-time, I’m “that kind” of old :D
I came here before the AMA was announced and I’m not the only one, very many “older” people used to “old” USENET and mailing-lists/groups are fleeing reddit as well.
And some young people I’ve seen simply don’t care and will go on using reddit no matter what.
Age doesn’t matter, it’s habits and mindset :)
Hello fellow old person! Back in my day, 2400 baud dialup BBSs were the “Internet”!
damn skippy! I would have “conversations” with my 300 baud modem for fun.
Older audience member here. I remember seeing the DOS 2.0 box sitting on my grandfather’s shelf, and him teaching me hours to use the CLI to make in inventory of my baseball cards.
I must’ve been about 5-6 years old then, and I later got to experience the absolute magic of 14.4 and still later that fad of whatever those .mp3 things were supposed to be…
I left reddit and made the effort to learn how these newfangled federal sites work, and I’ll keep at it. Never did quite understand what that clock social platform was about, or why the youngers like it so much, though suspect that’s by design.
You can count me in that age group too… I was there for the very first dial up, ICQ, Messenger, Kaza and the rest of it.
Shut my account on Reddit a few days back and have not been back since. Can’t recall how many years I was there but it’s easily 10+.
Napster and Kaza on dialup, PC set to auto redial after 3 hours to keep within the terms of my unlimited data plan.
Just over 20 years on one of the earliest “social media” websites, and I wasn’t exactly young when I joined that.
My reddit account is 8+ years old but I don’t feel right about deleting it or the comments.
As I wrote in another thread, many of my comments in there are answers to questions and/or explanations/instructions.
So many times I found solutions in reddit old comments that I couldn’t find anywhere else that it doesn’t feel right to me to remove mine.
I expect it’s actually the younger users who will be more resistant to migrating somewhere else. Most of the people I’ve seen saying they don’t support the blackout have said that the official app is the only way they’ve used Reddit. Which suggests they joined post-redesign
Realistically, it’s not so much about effort as it is difficulty in finding a replacement. I’m testing out Lemmy at the moment, but it took over 3 days for my first signup to become active, and that sort of delay is really confusing and frustrating for the average person. I think most people trying to come here may just give up.
Having to write an explanation for why I wanted to sign up was really discouraging for me. There should be more instances without that requirement.
there will be. there is a high likelihood of brigading and DOS attack on the most hevily used instances right now. as more instances are stood up and federation deepens, 1 click signup will likely become much more common. I think sh.itjust.works is currently just that simple.
Even if they lose 50% (unlikely) the changes they make will still be more lucrative for them. The people who leave are probably not their most profitable demographic in the first place. The new API fees will easily make up for that. Twitter was the same … as much as people predicted it’s demise it’s more profitable now than it ever was.
I’m just hugely happy and grateful to the people behind Lemmy whose hard work and unselfish behavior allowed us all to benefit.
I believe (and somewhat hope) that the n% of users leaving over this are mostly prosumers, leaving Reddit with mostly consumers. The, say, 5% of users leaving might be the ones who create >70% of the quality content the consumers browse Reddit for.
Given that Reddit relies on prosumers like them for 100% of its value, that would be a huge blow.