It is possible to estimate?

    • Awoo [she/her]
      ·
      1 year ago

      https://subredditstats.com

      Go to literally any subreddit, scroll to the comments per day graph and check out the drop on July 11th. The official date of the change was July 1st but they delayed it or something with a grace period. That drop on July 11th is the api drop.

      Some examples in order - /r/mildlyinfuriating /r/whitepeopletwitter /r/gaming /r/Askreddit

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        • Awoo [she/her]
          ·
          1 year ago

          What is happening over there is one of the biggest disasters I've ever seen online and the fact that it's going unreported on while Twitter and Musk continue to get all the attention is absolutely ridiculous. Reddit is collapsing and unless they do something enormous it is currently in a death spiral.

          • bigboopballs [he/him]
            ·
            1 year ago

            Reddit is collapsing and unless they do something enormous it is currently in a death spiral.

            where will all the nazis go!?

      • AernaLingus [any]
        ·
        edit-2
        1 year ago

        Holy shit. I'll be honest, having quit using reddit for daily browsing and simply relegating it to its main productive purpose of "usable Google results," I kind of assumed that the outrage over the API pricing ultimately didn't have much of an effect. But this data is nuts. I guess it goes to show the effect that alienating power users can have on a site that's so power-user driven, where a fraction of users even comment and a tiny fraction of that fraction posts content and an even tinier fraction of that tiny fraction moderates to keep things running smoothly.

        • Awoo [she/her]
          ·
          edit-2
          1 year ago

          Just recently updated on this, reddit are actively trying to do something about it but are still in the "oh fuck what do we do?" stage of gathering information. https://hexbear.net/comment/3946548

          I don't think this is all just alienating power users. I think a major aspect of this is disturbing routines that people previously had. When people have a daily routine where they do the same thing every single day you shouldn't disturb that because then they replace that part of their routine with something else, that's what users did with reddit imo when their preferred app no longer worked. They just used something else, probably Tiktok.