lvxferre,
@lvxferre@lemmy.ml avatar

I've been linking this text fairly often, but I think that it's worth a read. People might be focusing on the blackout but that's just the "now" - with or without blackouts, Reddit is a ticking bomb bound to eventually explode, and all the information there will be lost when it does.

And the fact that people have been relying on Reddit to look for information shows even deeper issues, not just with Reddit but the internet. Let's see...

  1. Google monopoly over the search market. Why would it need to make its product better, if you're still going to use it?
  2. Corporations always trying to prevent you from reaching the best result (because it won't lead you to their product), and engaging on an arms race through search engine optimisation. That's why people did that "reddit" trick.
  3. The encroachment of the ad industry into the internet. Oh look, I found the content that I wanted... no wait it's another ad. Move on...
  4. Governments more often pandering to corporations than defending the best interests of their taxpayers, and the legislation on what's allowed or disallowed on the internet suffering in result of that.
  5. Reddit monopoly over discussions.
  6. People sharing info in Reddit instead of through more resilient forms of digital media, as shown in the link.
HelixDab,

Google monopoly over the search market.

Mostly because it's better than other options though. For instance, when I use DDG, lots of boolean handles just don't work. If I look for "cat sweater -dog", I'm going to get nothing but dog sweaters. I find fewer useful, productive results on DDG than I do on Google. Other search engines are often even worse.

lvxferre, (edited )
@lvxferre@lemmy.ml avatar

If I look for “cat sweater -dog”, I’m going to get nothing but dog sweaters.

I tested this out, and I consistently got cat sweaters:

https://lemmy.ml/pictrs/image/f5e779e4-05c5-49f8-93cf-5c77bcc1c3f8.png

so odds are that the boolean handles issue is either messier (triggered under more specific conditions than in your example) or already fixed.

That said, I do agree with you that quality is one of the factors here; since Google search is considerably better than the alternatives, it feels no pressure to improve. But the problem is still there, we've been relying on a single search engine to find stuff for us, you get users learning how to work around those issues of that single search engine, and they won't be solved.

[Completely off-topic]I can't picture my cats using a sweater like this for more than five seconds. One would go full "cat.exe stopped working" and the other would shred it into pieces.

stewie3128,

Give Kagi sesrch engine a shot.

TheAnonymouseJoker,
@TheAnonymouseJoker@lemmy.ml avatar

I HAVE COME TO YOUR RESCUE, YOUNGUNS

Use your favourite search engine, search " reddit". Whatever search results pop up, those threads should be old enough to be archived over at Internet Archive or archive.is. Install Resurrect Pages addon in web browser. Open your reddit search results, and Resurrect Pages gives you the option to open their archived versions. If the "reddit.com/..." archive cannot be found, scroll to an older version if available. You can also modify URL to "old.reddit.com/..." to see if archived version exists.

You can find more or less any relevant threads if you use a combination of Google, Bing and Yandex with that search-fu. You can also use Searx, Baidu, Startpage or any other search engine for this trick.

spulkin,

I think it would be more accurate to say that Google has gotten a lot worse over time, and removing the crutch of reddit results is making that suddenly more obvious. Google results mostly suck, but you can sometimes find what you're actually looking for on reddit.

Cyzaine,
Cyzaine avatar

This was an interesting video on the topic from before the blackout. Its definitely a multi layered problem but the blackout is just showing how bad Google and SEO has gotten:

https://youtu.be/48AOOynnmqU

fruitywelsh,

I noticed it myself too! Hopefully we can get a good way to search through the internet archive backup of reddit people are building soon, or at least get those posts pushed out through the fediverse so people can see them.

MarxOrDie,

I think it's great that the mods still hold some degree of power over so much important data. Leaving everything that a large community has created in the hands of one asshole CEO is a shitty reality of modern times.

ShutYourPieHole,

The irony is that Google is treated as an evil enterprise that only wants your data and yet we all willingly gave Reddit all our data and information while talking about how evil Google is.

I've gone looking for a few solutions to issues and the results were Reddit threads. Thanks for the cache trick, I'll keep that in mind to hopefully continue to avoid Reddit. Ideally we have a better solution in the future that does not result in all our data being held hostage.

PuzzledBlueberry,

Seems unrelated to open source?

RoundSparrow,

I agree, too many communities here keep getting meta discussion about Reddit - and the open community aspect of Lemmy isn't very organized.

That said...

This sort of change by the community isn't new. One of Twitter's great strengths was that it was an identifiable brand and you could tell someone a username and it was mostly unambiguous.

I remember the days when Usenet archive ran out of money, before Google purchased it back in early 2001: https://www.wired.com/2001/02/google-buys-deja-archive/ - searching Usenet archives was going to be lost.

Jozzo,
@Jozzo@lemmy.world avatar

At least in Google Chrome, you can add "cache:" to the beginning of the reddit URL to retrieve a cached version of the site. It's worked for most of the reddit links I've needed to access.

eg: cache:https://reddit.com/r/...

I_Miss_Daniel,
I_Miss_Daniel avatar

Aah great. I tried a search about oil on the exhaust today and the first google result was a reddit post, but when I went to read it it says private sub. I couldn't find the cache option on Android Chrome so found results on other sites.

em2,
@em2@lemmy.ml avatar

Take the useful information you find and make a post on the fediverse! That way we'll have that information going forward and won't need to rely on cached info.

sourcery,

I think it's a major loss considering the SEO garbage results you get nowadays. But the fault is on Reddit for doing this to themself, don't forget.

derived_allegory, (edited )

Reddit needs to be replaced sooner or later. Unless they stay true to their goal and never have capital screwing the community.

A federated and community-based services is the better way to keep useful conversation on the internet to help everyone.

econpol,

I wish the internet archive took over reddit as just another public service.

orthizaR,

I already encountered this a few times while searching for something specific. Even though the protests are understandable it makes it so much harder to find information.

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