Still, with a chunk of Reddit shut down, there’s no initial public offering. So if Huffman really wants to go public, he will need to find a way to align moderators and investors. One option would be to pay mods, or – if they don’t want to become de-facto employees – reward them in other ways. For example, he has pledged to develop new tools to replace the beloved apps. Either path involves higher costs, and a more tortuous path to profitability.

In short, the mods have shown that Reddit needs a business-model tweak. And potential investors will want to see it in action before shelling out for the shares, which makes a rushed IPO seem unwise. The self-branded “front page of the internet” has been waiting to IPO since 2021; it may have to moderate its expectations again.

4 points

No, Reddit needs to have someone kick Huffman off the company and buy off his shares for pennies

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3 points
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I tried to do a cross post but I’m not sure I understand how. I may have broke it but editing it.

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1 point

I can’t believe that article is on Reuters. Much of the writing is awful.

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1 point

I didn’t find it bad. But it is an opinion piece.

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1 point
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Yeah I think the person who wrote it didn’t do much research on the subject. Alas it’s an opinion piece so can’t really apply the same standards I guess.

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4 points

Son of a removed I want puts. Let them IPO ffs.

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12 points

“In addition to setting guidelines for their forums, many are quasi-influencers who engage and lure users. And unlike counterparts elsewhere, Reddit’s mods are unpaid. That makes them an odd hybrid of employees, customers and suppliers. Researchers at Northwestern University estimate that Reddit’s mods perform at least $3.4 million worth of labor annually.”

It’s a good explanation of why Reddit’s structure is both brilliant and fragile. They depend on this labor which costs them nothing, but that also means they don’t really have control over them. Huffman can’t just say shut up and get back to work since they’re not on the payroll.

It also paints a much bleaker picture of their business prospects than most of the other articles I’ve seen. They seem believe the weaknesses that were revealed by this blackout are going to prevent them from going public any time soon.

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4 points
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They seem believe the weaknesses that were revealed by this blackout are going to prevent them from going public any time soon.

Good

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1 point

may have to moderate its expectations

That’s about the only thing getting moderated on Reddit these days.

(Sorry, couldn’t resist…)

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