this post was submitted on 15 Jun 2023
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Technology

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[–] aaronbieber@beehaw.org 49 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (3 children)

Louis Rossmann is a bit of a provocateur, but what he's saying in this video is the bare and unvarnished truth. If Reddit cared about its users and its moderators, the CEO's internal messaging would be less like "this will blow over" and more like "what should we do to meet these people in the middle?"

There is no meeting in the middle when you're up against institutional investors who have put literally hundreds of millions of dollars on the line to fund your operation. I almost feel bad for Steve, he really has no choice, it's just a shame to see him falling into line and reciting exactly what the board wants him to say.

And by the way, this is why Beehaw has so much promise. The incentives of the operators and the users are aligned. There is no third party with outsized power waiting for the chance to pull the rip cord and enshittify the whole thing.

[–] patchymoose@rammy.site 12 points 1 year ago (1 children)

He definitely has a choice. As a founder of Reddit, if he really believed that this was the wrong move, he could refuse to do something he disagreed with and make the board essentially have to fire him.

I walked away from a well paying job myself several years ago because I disagreed morally with choices being made by the company. It is absolutely something that people can do, especially someone of his means.

Unfortunately we live in a society where it's easy to separate responsibility for actions taken at work with actions taken personally; indeed, that is the whole premise of a limited liability company. But I still hold Steve personally responsible for his choices, and I think he is selling out the values of Reddit, and his own values if he ever had any, for money.

[–] KirinMizuki@lemmy.blahaj.zone 8 points 1 year ago

I too left an insanely well paying job due to ongoing moral compromises I couldn’t carry forward with. The thing here is Reddit itself has no value without content provided by it’s userbase. They offer no commodity outside of the hosting and user website. To suddenly rugpull 3rd party developers is a shit move against the community that contributes content which enables monetization via user metadata, ads and coin revenue.

Reddit is actually nothing without it’s userbase, and it’s far-reaching userbase is enabled through phone apps, mod tools and other 3rd party support. Hell even most moderators are UNPAID. It’s a gaint sham to suddenly demand payment from 3rd party developers, and it’s ONLY because they’re losing out on ad revenue and that sweet sweet marketing user data they sell which Apollo (and other apps) do not collect.

[–] Powderhorn@beehaw.org 9 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Rossman only hit my radar in the past week, but that can be said of a shitton of things at this point. Having no history with his work, I'm currently impressed with the level-headed descriptions of the situation with Reddit he's been posting.

Beehaw has provided the bridge from "I hope something can be a suitable replacement for Reddit" to "Wait, why the fuck would I want to go back to that?" and has made me realize I need to closely examine more defaults in my life.

I've been following him for years at this point. The one recurring theme... He'll get into something new... get fucked over by it... learn from it... then detail exactly what should have happened/what went wrong/why/etc without much preconceived bullshit or leaning to any particular stance... And he always takes responsibility for all his fuck ups. I wish more people were like Louis.

[–] root@u.fail 8 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Meh, beehaw seemed promising until they unilaterally decided to cut off large parts of lemmy. I get why, but I moved to another server because I want to control my own experience

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

I get why

I'm out of the loop. Why did they de-federate with other lemmy instances?

[–] dingus@lemmy.ml 1 points 1 year ago

lemmy.world and sh.itjust.works both are basically a free-for-all to signup, and they were dealing with heavily increased amounts of trolls from those instances. They are currently in talks with the admins/mods of those instances to try to rectify the problem and re-federate, but to keep beehaw a safe space, where losers can't walk in off the street and acost their userbase, they needed to remove federation from these instances.

There are only a handful of full-time admin/mods for beehaw and they don't do this for a living, this is something they do on the side, for no pay. It is not in their best interest nor the best interest of the users to let hundreds of new accounts from an entirely different instance run roughshod over their server.

It is entirely reasonable. The user above will not "control their own experience" until they have started their own instance. How long until the admins they're currently under make a decision they don't like at u.fail? Who knows, could be days, could be years, but the thing is: it's likely.