![]() ![]() New items are added approximately every quarter, when launched features are removed from the list. Learn about the publicly announced products and features planned for Google Workspace (G Suite). Having a problem with Google Workspace (G Suite)? Check here before asking: Want to find out what's coming or what's new in Google Workspace (G Suite)? Check here: If you use an affiliate link in a post or comment on this subreddit, please be sure to clearly mark it as an affiliate link. Affiliate links are not outright banned, but their use is discouraged. This rule does not prohibit user discussion, questions, comments, mentions, etc. If you want to run an advertisement for a product or service, you need to use reddit ads to do so. Punishment is ultimately down to moderator discretion.Īdvertising products or services in posts or comments on this subreddit is not allowed. Any violation of this rule will end with a warning or ban, depending on the severity of the violation. Racist, sexist, and/or hateful comments/posts are absolutely not tolerated here. Farewell, Reddit - you were good while you lasted. I can only hope that Huffman and his board change their minds, but I don’t really see it happening. Not only do I morally disagree with Reddit’s stance on this, but I simply don’t think I’d have a good time using it on my phone without Sync. ![]() I think I really will be joining the legions who plan to depart. Fun activities like r/Place - an annual group project where users could collectively paint a huge digital canvas one pixel at a time - really helped set it apart from the rest of the social media landscape. It’s the perfect one-stop-shop for gamers and tech enthusiasts like me too there’s nowhere else I can have the same conversations about weird little quirks of computer hardware. I’ve been using Reddit since I was a teenager, and it was an incredibly valuable resource to me as a young queer person, discovering myself and forging bonds within welcoming online communities. The r/Place project was the perfect example of the weird and wonderful things Reddit could do that no other social media platform could. Charging through the nose for API access won’t do you any good if nobody is willing to pay you for it, Mr Huffman, but it very much will damage your platform’s reputation. It’s fascinating to see that Reddit seemingly plans to charge ahead with its API monetization - especially when it looks like its biggest potential customers have collectively downed tools in response. Chances are that if everything goes according to Reddit’s plans, those could become permanent homes for communities abandoning the site. People are already migrating away from Reddit as a result of the API changes I’m already in a handful of Discord servers that were created by the mods of small subreddits as a refuge during the blackout. As it stands, this could actually be the death of Reddit - or at least, the death of Reddit as we know it today. If Reddit management had taken the precaution of improving their own first-party app before the announcement that they would be price-gouging access to the social media platform’s API, perhaps the reaction wouldn’t have been so aggressive. Granted, it's worth noting that API access for moderators and tools that aren't monetized themselves will remain free, and Reddit explained in a post on the site that it plans to add more tools to improve the moderating experience - something that will likely be necessary since subreddits are largely run by volunteer mods, many of whom plan to quit once their preferred client goes down. Apollo creator Christian Selig posted on Reddit to claim that the platform's management had spread slander about him internally, further muddying the waters and hinting at a possible vendetta against Apollo. We reached out for comment and received both a statement that Reddit has to "spend multi-millions of dollars on hosting fees" as well as a slightly catty remark claiming that "Apollo is notably less efficient than other third-party apps" in terms of the number of API requests it makes. Reddit was worth a whopping $15 billion dollars as of 2021 the site is estimated to pull in more than half a billion dollars in revenue every year, too. It's not even like it's necessary, frankly. So I’m not exactly enthused about the idea of my preferred Reddit client - and everyone else’s - being taken down because Reddit’s controlling shareholders saw Elon Musk trying to squeeze third-party devs over on Twitter and thought ‘boy, we should be more like him!’ ![]() ![]() It feels like the longer you use the official Reddit app in a single session, the more unstable it becomes. ![]()
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