this post was submitted on 09 Jun 2023
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There were 3 things going for Reddit, content wise: memes, news, hobby subs. It was a 50/50 if my Google search included reddit or Wikipedia. If reddit threw up a banner every 6 months and asked for a donation, I'd gladly throw 20 bucks their way. Reddit should have been a non-profit.
Going public was the absolute worse decision they ever made.
I used to buy a pretty good amount of gold before they let in actual fascists and then downplayed their toxic impact on the community and the internet in general.
I didn't join Reddit until way later, but depending on how back are you talking about, Reddit wasn't very good before either, the jailbait shitty thing for example.
Agreed, I don't know why Reddit is pushing to go public. Personally I don't see the value in a business that admits that they aren't profitable, but that raises the question if they aren't making money how as Reddit operated for so long? The upside to them going public is that they'll have to start publishing financial statements and we'll get to just how much money the "unprofitable" business is making.
I think it's probably being pushed by the people who invested in Reddit to make it go public so they can sell shares / cash out. But this is just my opinion
These are the steps the current admins are following:
Every exec wants money for themselves, even if it comes at the cost of the company they run