The end result was a stalemate. Reddit did not change any of its policies. Enough of the people responsible for posting and managing content left the platform to cause a noticeable impact on it.
It wasn't a "stalemate," Reddit got its way
As a casual but persistent user, it pains me to say it - because ethically I support the grassroots side of the equation - but as a path of least resistance to casual, anonymous public engagement on a wide range of topics, there seems no viable alternative. [For a given subjective value of 'viable', naturally!]. So after a period of abstention, I gradually ended up back there, simply because I know of no other sizeable gatherings on certain topics that aren't either annoyingly gatekept (technically, and/or socially), and/or are far more toxic themselves.
All that to say you still browse reddit
There's a sea of lemmee and mastodon posters saying how they 2024 will be the year of their platform
Jump in the discussion.
No email address required.
I don't even want to troll on reddit just having a neutral voice and hanging out causes people to flip out, so there's no point even
would be a clever way sort of to prevent trolling in general except for that they actually go and remove the comments so it's not even that
Jump in the discussion.
No email address required.
More options
Context