Despite mass protests by users and moderators, Reddit's unique communities look likely to survive the rebellion over the company's new business strategy.
This is a really bad article, and reads almost like a press release. The entirety of their supporting evidence that it’s on the rebound is that they uncrippled a few tools, some subs are open again, and they are working on (not released) improving the official app to have better mod tools. That and previous protests have failed.
There is nothing about subscriptions, daily visits, user engagement, etc.
This is a really bad article, and reads almost like a press release. The entirety of their supporting evidence that it’s on the rebound is that they uncrippled a few tools, some subs are open again, and they are working on (not released) improving the official app to have better mod tools. That and previous protests have failed.
There is nothing about subscriptions, daily visits, user engagement, etc.