This news is what brought me back to check out Lemmy. I‘m just not gonna pay just to be able to use an alternative app to browse Reddit, no way, I‘d rather dump Reddit entirely.
Technology
This is the official technology community of Lemmy.ml for all news related to creation and use of technology, and to facilitate civil, meaningful discussion around it.
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Rules:
1: All Lemmy rules apply
2: Do not post low effort posts
3: NEVER post naziped*gore stuff
4: Always post article URLs or their archived version URLs as sources, NOT screenshots. Help the blind users.
5: personal rants of Big Tech CEOs like Elon Musk are unwelcome (does not include posts about their companies affecting wide range of people)
6: no advertisement posts unless verified as legitimate and non-exploitative/non-consumerist
7: crypto related posts, unless essential, are disallowed
The only social media I'm willing to pay for is community developed social media. I'll gladly donate to support Mastodon and if Lemmy gains enough popularity I regularly visit I'd donate to support it too, but screw paying for "premium" "features" on corporate social media that is actively taking away from users to make the paid option more attractive.
I don't use apps, but if they get rid of old.reddit.com I'm done. I've been on Reddit since the Digg migration and Digg for several years prior. It's high time to ditch corporate backed social media. I've been enjoying Mastodon recently, so time to join Lemmy too. The Reddit ship is sinking and has been for years (since the stupid redesign) but there's not much left above water at this point.
I used to think projects like Nitter or NewPipe were a bit overzealous, scraping the webpage or using the webpage's API rather than the official API, but it's starting to look like simply less of a pain in the butt. 🙃
get bit too many times and you start wearing gloves.
Yeah, I just could not imagine a scenario where these companies would close up their API. You don't offer an API as a service toward others. You offer it, so 3rd party devs don't scrape your webpage, which is not an 'API' you want to keep stable. It's a service toward your own devs.
API - Adversarial Programming Interface
If it affects alternative frontends like libreddit, teddit, etc., that will be enough for me to almost completely quit browsing.
Events like this are unpredictable, and it is why places like Lemmy need to always be ready to receive and retain users. I lost some interest because I felt the main instances had similar problems (culturally) to reddit instead of trying to be something better, and that community feedback seemed to go unreceived. The technology can help, but the rest is up to people putting in extra effort.
Yes there is definitely a lack in variety regarding instances. So people just need to go ahead and create new ones.
Might be the beginning of the end for Reddit and might have similar effects for Lemmy as it had for Mastodon.
I suspect the sign up process here might impede such a thing.
And...now I'm here. I guess I hope that works out for them.
It's funny because I just recently created a tiny web app that I run off my own computer which allows me to aggregate the feeds of any subreddit I want along with posts from Lemmy and other Reddit-like forums. Because of this, this change won't really affect me. While I do occasionally use a third party Reddit app to surf Reddit, I mostly just use my web app and it doesn't use any Reddit APIs but just scrapes the website directly. Only thing is I've heard that they might be getting rid of old Reddit. I currently scrape from old Reddit rather than the new one because the old one has easier HTML objects to identify. Still, it shouldn't be too hard start scraping the new UI, if I have to.
you might want to get in contact with the folks at libreddit who are concerned anonymous endpoints will be closed - thus killing libreddit and teddit
interesting. It looks like libreddit at least would be squashed.
In that issue they're saying "hmm I wonder if this would apply to unauthenticated API requests".
It seems nonsensical to me that it wouldn't apply to unauthenticated API requests.
according to their matrix room teddit will meet the same fate
Stupidmove motived by greed on their part but good for Lemmy
I was wondering about libreddit and teddit as well lol.
Reddit's announcement made me open lemmy to check the discussion happening here lol. Now I'll check hackernews as well.
Also, can someone help me access other instances from the jerbora app? I'm a bit new to lemmy. I can't seem to get it working by following the official help pages. The three dot on the top right of the search bar tab doesn't seem to work and I'm not sure what that is for.
You can subscribe to federated communities that have already been connected, within the jerboa UI. Click the communities button at the bottom, then go to them.
But unfortunately you can't do the initial connection yet within jerboa.... that only works through the lemmy-ui search bar atm.
Thanks for the answer. I'll give it a try.
Update: I got it working. Thanks a bunch.
And reddit will go the way of Digg if they continue on doing this nonsense.
Initially I my response was "big whoop" I just realized that I pretty much only use reddit through RIF. I won't pay a subscription, so guess I'll mostly be done with reddit.
Hopefully the communities on reddit will have a bit more usage on lemmy in the near future.
Here's a post from the Apollo app developer about how it affects 3rd party apps: https://www.reddit.com/r/apolloapp/comments/12ram0f/had_a_few_calls_with_reddit_today_about_the/
This is a really interesting read; although I believe there is still some resentment when he changed from Pro to Ultra. As someone who purchased both it wasn't the best user experience.
hahaha welp good luck with that, hellsite
Reading through, it makes sense unlike Twitter's policy change. Why should tech giants have access to Reddit's API on Reddit's dime at no benefit to Reddit or Reddit's users? As long as users are able to keep running bots and alternative apps, I don't see a problem. I just hope that they would allow free academic licenses.
The thing is whether privacy oriented frontends will be requested to pay or not. Cause one of the ways to detect whether one is a regular user, or something else, might be user accesses or requests. A frontend instance is in fact a 3rd party, and most probably will be detected as such, therefore privacy oriented frontends will vanish, as the ones for twitter did, right?
Reddit could add anti-bot restrictions, but they don't, because bots drive up their "engagement" numbers. This is entirely two-faced. They essentially just want to make some money off of something they already see as benefitting them.
I was thinking specifically of bots that are associated with a community, like moderation aids or Wheel of Time's Lews Therin quote bot. I'm not sure the bots you're thinking of actually do increase engagement numbers if they can be detected. Advertisers are only interested in human eyeballs.
Advertisers are only interested in human eyeballs.
Very true, but this reveals the conflicts of interest between these social media companies, and the advertisers they sell space to. They want to say to advertisers: buy an ad on our site, it will reach thousands of real people! See all this activity! When in reality a lot of that activity is bot generated.
Both advertisers and users want to reach and talk to real people, but it's in these social media companies interest to inflate their numbers and fake engagement any way they can.
This isn't a small problem either, I've heard it said that half of all tweets, and a good percentage of youtube comments are from bots.
It's even a reason for those companies not to sell "no advertisement" subscriptions to their users. Reddit could offer something like that, but it would mean to lose the most valuable eyeballs (which belong to the humans who can afford to pay for not seeing ads) when it comes to marketing the website to advertisers.
Good! there's way too many bots on Reddit anyway! :)
Hah, unfortunately the malicious ones will just buy fake/stolen accounts.
I believe that's irrelevant, it'll still make it a lot harder to bot Reddit.
I use the Boost app. I wish I could set it to work with lemmy instead of reddit
I designed Jerboa mainly based off of boost; its also my favorite reddit app UI-wise. But I don't have too much time to spend on it as I'm spread very thin between a lot of projects.
Been using Jerboa on Android for a bit. Like it. Thank you.
Jerboa is awesome. It is my goto way of connecting to Lemmy. Thank you!
No probs!
Really? Boost is also my favourite reddit app lol. That's probably why I took a liking to jerbora instantly lol. I saw some similarities but didn't think it was based off of boost.
There's some awesome communities on Reddit. It doesn't look like user API keys will be behind a paywall only corporations. This is should have no effect on using Open Source Reddit clients. Ideally, I'd love to see more communities start building on Lemmy of course.
@kixik Does this affect alternative Reddit clients as well?
Not kixik, but this will affect all 3rd party reddit clients. Those app devs who don't pay, won't get access.
This sucks. Some people (including me, until sometime the following days) still have smartphones with abismally low amounts of storage. Getting alternative clients for anything is just vital in these cases (and Reddit does not offer a "lite" version of its app, like other vendors do).
Hope I will still be able to use the one I'm currently on or get used to the official app.
Oh wow, ~~bold~~ dumb move, with how subpar their 1st-party apps have always been...
@kixik apologies to the people on Lemmy for this slightly out of context comment if it shows up. Slightly, because @bloonface just mentioned setting up an instance because of this, and I was curious to see how interacting with threads without a Lemmy account works.
It works just fine.