When are they trying to IPO and cash out? A better way to avoid the backlash would have been to just slowly increase the API fees until all the third party apps were priced out. Then there wouldn't be a hard event to rage about, just mild grumblings while one by one each app says they can't afford this particular price hike.
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A better way to avoid the backlash would have been to just slowly increase the API fees until all the third party apps were priced out.
I think that it's what they tried to do, but the decision makers are so disconnected from the platform and its community that they thought that the starting prices were reasonable. (They aren't.)
I've been testing lemmy and it's been working great so far. It only requires some fixes and influx of users.
I have more posts than I know what to do with. I have subscribed to a lot of communities from a lot of different instances so it's a lot of activity.
I recommend everyone to do this and then later turn off some if it becomes too much. But being able to see most of the posts and contribute there will help Lemmy take off. :)
And I'm all for it! It's good to have alternatives though, hope to see Lemmy doing well regardless of what the outcome is.
Honestly, I appreciate the protests, but this whole kerfuffle got me to realize how much I... don't like reddit anymore? There are certain communities that I'll stick around for (shoutout to /r/BravoRealHousewives), but I've already set up an RSS server for news and I'm probably going to unsub from a LOT of the more general ones. Too many bots, too much negativity, etc.
So far, Lemmy > Reddit. Was able to easily find equivalent communities and honestly, I enjoy it. :)