7
Huffman takes a "victory" lap: "As the AI era begins, Reddit is leaning into its humanity."
(www.fastcompany.com)
### About Community Tracking and helping #redditmigration to Kbin and the Fediverse. Say hello to the decentralized and open future. To see latest reeddit blackout info, see here: https://reddark.untone.uk/
"Outside, pretty viola; inside, rotten wood."
I don't interact with Reddit any more so it's plain as day for me to see, when I do visit it, that the place changed considerably from the APIcalypse to now. It's the decadence from the last ~5 years, except on steroids; brain drained, bots going rogue, users screeching at each other based on assumptions and mods doing nothing to handle it. Those trashy and large subreddits are fairly active, but it seems to me that activity for smaller subs went considerably down.
And based on how he handled the third party apps, he's likely omitting critical concerns.
And also, you know...
Holy shit, Greedy Pigboy's ability to lie with a straight face never ceases to amaze me. It's almost like he's telling the interviewer "you're gullible trash, aren't you? Yes, you're stupid, so are the things reading your article. I'm going to smear some bullshit on your snouts and you're going to swallow it, like the filthy animals lacking human-like reasoning that you are."
Sorry folks here for the tone. I can't be bothered to read it further.
Potentially hot take: perhaps it's time to punish Reddit Inc. and Greedy Pigboy, isn't it?
They're going to train those AIs to be as degenerative as the Reddit users themselves, lol. Glorious.
The small subs matter a lot. Same principal as grocery stores, everyone carries the most popular products but the large variety of storm moving products keeps people coming to a specific store. Likewise any old website can have your basic selection of memes news politics Etc but the smaller communities are what make the place unique. We're basically at the point where for a lot of people those Basics are already met so Reddit having problems with their smaller subreddits means I'll be less to keep people around. Once those communities all make their way over here then there'll be nothing but generic slop. An audience of normies scrolling past slop can just vanish in an instant
Yeah, I recently made a reference to /r/CrabsEatingThings in another thread. Where the hell do I go for such oddly specific content now?
Unfortunately I think that means it's our responsibility to start those communities and seat them with the initial content