I completely agree. I was actually surprised at first about how much I cared about Reddit dying but then I thought about how much time I had spent on it and how different my life was before.
I'm obviously looking forward to kbin/fediverse growing (and genuinely believe it can provide some solutions to the issues we ran into with Reddit) but right now I think I'm still gonna need to see Reddit burn down for their decisions and constant ignoring of their long term userbase.
I imagine it'll take time to see the full migration. Many users might wait before making an account or even just not be sure which instance they want their account on right away.
I personally took a few days to decide whether I would move or just stop using Reddit like platforms. And after that it took a day or so to decide on my instance and then start actually using a new platform.
I just wish it wasn't always the first few results when you look up information on certain topics. Especially for really niche issues since it's often the only place with answers right now. That's basically that only time I visit reddit at this point.
I was on the fence about what I would do when the API changes go live on July 1st. Seeing his comments over the last few days has made that decision a whole lot easier.
I definitely agree with this. I've often thought recently about how different the internet feels compared to even just a few years ago. "reddit made the internet feel smaller" is spot on for describing that feeling.
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Reddit’s average daily traffic fell during blackout, according to third-party data | Engadget (www.engadget.com)
On the day before the Reddit blackout began on June 12th, Similarweb logged more than 57 million daily visits to the platform.
Reddit CEO says he’ll change rules to end protest (www.msn.com)
Main points: He plans to make moderators popularly elected to more easily vote them out....
Reddit CEO Steve Huffman on blackout: It's expensive to run a company. (www.npr.org)
"It's time we grow up," says former moderator of jailbait subreddit.
OC There is a lesson to be learned here
TL;DR: We should bring blogs (self-publishing) back instead of putting all our knowledge into other people's websites....