this post was submitted on 05 Jun 2023
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Some of the planned blackouts will be temporary, others plan to shut their subreddits down indefinitely in protest.

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[–] spoonful@beehaw.org 1 points 2 years ago (20 children)

Glad to see so many subreddits contributing to this. Reddit IPO is the worst thing that happened to it and the original founders would have never allowed reddit to get to this point.

The thing is that people would gladly play 2-5usd/mo to keep 3rd party clients but Reddit is making super difficult on purpose. No way they are getting 5usd/mo per user from ads.

[–] illiterati@lemmy.one 1 points 2 years ago

I'm not willing to pay a subscription to Reddit. Forcing the apps to charge and then pay Reddit a fee is just a veiled attempt to squeeze money out of the very users that make and mod the content by the corporate idiots in control of the site.

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[–] argv_minus_one@beehaw.org 1 points 2 years ago (2 children)

Not surprised to see /r/ProCSS in that list. It was founded in response to another of Reddit's terrible decisions. Speaking of which, I wonder if Lemmy could be made to support community-specific CSS stylesheets like old Reddit could? That'd be neat. Of course, it would need to support user-created communities first.

I also wonder if any of those subreddits will direct people to the Fediverse. Hope so.

[–] nutomic@lemmy.ml 1 points 2 years ago

For now admins can already add custom themes to their Lemmy instances. Its described in the docs.

[–] OneFluffyBoi@octodon.social 1 points 2 years ago (1 children)

@argv_minus_one Oh yeah, I remember when they promised that CSS support was coming... 7 years ago. As for redirecting people to the Fediverse, some of the apps like RedReader are openly considering it.

https://www.reddit.com/r/RedReader/comments/13ylk42/update_3_reddit_effectively_kills_off_third_party/

"Right now I'm considering the possibility of modifying the app to connect to a Reddit alternative such as Lemmy or Mastodon. There would be something very satisfying about some of the bigger Reddit apps driving their userbase to alternative sites too, and if this helped one of those platforms gain traction then that would be a step in the right direction."

Personally I think it wouldn't be a bad idea if some of these app creators hosted their own Fediverse instance and sent all their users to it.

[–] argv_minus_one@beehaw.org 1 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) (13 children)

Problem: millions of redditors currently use third-party Reddit apps. Abruptly sending millions of people to the Lemmy instance you just deployed is a sure-fire way to break it, and maybe bring down the whole federated network of Lemmy instances. Lemmy currently has issues scaling above a few hundred users, as Beehaw has recently discovered, let alone millions.

Problem: Lemmy is a completely different protocol, and there's less than a month left before all third-party Reddit apps become useless and everyone uninstalls them. That's an exceedingly tight timetable and an exceedingly unforgiving deadline.

That said, it's now or never; death or glory. We're not going to get another chance to bring over that many people to Lemmy all at once.

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