this post was submitted on 09 Jun 2023
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Technology
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I can totally understand that the main dev behind RedReader isn't particularly happy about, especially because he "was graced" by an exception.
In hindsight, this whole situation reminds me of Tweetbot. Being completely dependent on 1 provider for your app. Not sure, if that was a smart move. But hindsight is always 20/20.
Yeah, this has served as a massive wake-up call to a lot of talented devs. It will ultimately result in more talent choosing to focus on the "alternatives," which is good. It's too bad its happening this way, but the process was never going to be pleasant.
If you build your app against a major corporation, they are just a bad earnings call away from destroying your entire world. A lesson I was hoping that Reddit wouldn't be the one to make, but here we are I guess.
Build against open source, every time. Closed source will throw you away