7 points

It’s never been about the API. Third party apps are undercutting Reddit’s as revenue. They could never ban the apps outright so they set an obscene cost for API calls to indirectly kill them. They have probably factored in the potential loss of users already and it probably ain’t much.

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4 points

Reddit still doesn’t quite understand where their value is derived from.

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3 points

I can imagine bunch of idiots making user base and profit/loss projections without even opening reddit for once.

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3 points

What do they say?

When your opponent is making mistakes, let them.

Its an unfortunate ideology that everything in the world should be optimized around profit.

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0 points

I mean Reddit is clearly a company that shoyld focus on making proft. I don’t have problems with that. The problem is that it’s a stupid decision that doesn’t seem to nessesarily help them profit wise. Besides, it has been a great platform for countless communities that I just didn’t want it to end.

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4 points

Reddit is lemmy’s marketing department

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2 points

$0.24 per 1000 requests is not being “fairly paid”. It’s an abusive price and it’s at least 10000x their actual server cost

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1 point

Wow. I had not done the math. That’s an obscene amount of money. 1000 requests is nothing for a web app like Reddit, even with agreeing over-fetching.

The crazy thing is that they might have gotten away with it if they had structured it right. Set up the infastructure themselves to charge the individual user directly for their API use rather than the App creators. Carve out exceptions for moderation APIs and known moderation bots. I probably would have paid a few bucks a month to keep using Relay. I would have grumbled about it… but I would have done it.

Now I’m just gonna leave, lol.

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1 point

or enable it only for the dozens of users that have reddit premium

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2 points
*

So long as they can pocket a few hundred milion from the IPO, Reddit management couldn’t give a monkey’s about any of their milions of users or the thousands of communities that made Reddit valuable in the first place. They are quite happily flushing all that down the toilet to get their big pay day. Why didn’t they just go non-profit like Wikipedia? That’s the only business model that makes sense for Reddit and is sustainable. But then nobody gets to become a multi millionaire, and we can all see which would be the bigger tragedy for u/spez.

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