this post was submitted on 30 Jul 2023
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[–] TiredNerdDad@lemmy.ml 35 points 1 year ago (3 children)

I think it was an uphill struggle and nearly impossible to pull off.

Spez had absolutely no interest in changing his stance on working with developers. The hugely ironic thing I read that made me give up hope (and stash my ~1 year in development Reddit App) was Spez saying "It was never designed to support third-party apps." -- yet no acknowledgement that the "official" app was literally a third party app that they purchased years ago called Alien Blue.

Source

[–] socsa@lemmy.ml 23 points 1 year ago

He's a fucking idiot or a liar. I'd believe either. Or both.

The entire point of having this free, public API is because a free, public API can be monetized, and content scraping cannot. If you are offering a free web app, and you don't have a free, public API, someone will create scraping tools to do it. So then, instead of spending money maintaining a revenue generating API, you spend money playing cat and mouse with content scraping bots.

The fact that reddit can't figure out how to push monetization over that API has nothing to do with third party apps, and everything to do with the site having shit leadership.

[–] MartinXYZ@lemmy.ml 8 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Wow! Is that what happened to Alien Blue? I remember people Praising Alien Blue Years ago... How did they mess that up so bad?

[–] Sigmatics@lemmy.ca 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Not defending spez, but their business model was not designed to support third party apps, that much is true. They needed a proper model to share profits with third party apps.

How they went about "fixing" that was completely dilletantish and dumbfounding, though. Now they're not getting any of that potential extra profit and lost a significant amount of users on top