this post was submitted on 10 Jun 2023
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Not really, to be honest. Whilst I understand why it's happening, I find the fact it's happening at all really damn depressing. The fact some of the largest communities have to literally cease operation for a website riding off of the success brought by those same communities to listen (if they do, that is.) is beyond sad. Really speaks to the direction the internet as a whole is going.
Agreed. This is depressing as hell. Apollo is a joy to use. There are so many niche communities on Reddit that I enjoy, and even if Lemmy or other federated things like it take off, those communities are largely going to die. This is a tragedy, no matter how you look at it. We are losing.
I also agree, that it is extraordinarily sad to say goodbye to my top used app (RiF); but I would say even sadder still is Reddit's decisions proving how little they value their user base.
I, myself, was likely not a high value user; but the way Reddit is treating its mod teams who have spent countless hours performing a relatively thankless job for free, is simply egregious.
Makes you wonder how many absolutely awesome things that society has lost, or would otherwise have, if capitalism and greed hadn’t absolutely fucking ruined things. It’s tragic that we can’t have nice things just because they’re nice, someone has to make a buck in order for a thing to exist.