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Unity updates its runtime fees
(blog.unity.com)
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The Reddit blackout had more of an effect than it appears. I saw an article a couple of weeks ago that showed commenting and posting was down ~50% since the blackouts; and I can safely say I haven't gone back to Reddit since, and I'm sure others have made similar choices as well.
People can have trouble "voting with their wallets," but I genuinely believe it is possible and does have an effect. Hopefully people do not forget the choices Unity has made here; but even if they do, Godot has already gotten a significant boost from this catastrophe.
I'd be interested in reading that. I know personally on bad days I'd sometimes have over 100 comments. (Bad meaning too active). Since the first day here on lemmy I haven't even logged into my reddit account. They burned me hard by killing Sync for Reddit.
It follows the 90-9-1 rule though, so while they have users who use it, I think they burned a lot of the people who posted and commented.
I was able to track down the article (Garbage Day URL, Archive.today URL).
The portion I was referring to was:
Personally I was not contributing much there; but I suspect the users they offended most were the power users, which is where most of the content comes from.
Reddit power users were the most likely ones to care enough about the platform's direction to be willing to give it up, I would think.
For most Reddit users, it's just an endless stream of information, different in form but not different in function from any other social media platform.
But for the people posting content (posts and comments), losing their tools was a huge barrier to continuing to engage, and the complete disrespect and libel to the Apollo dev made a lot of those most invested in Reddit very angry.
I used to browse Reddit 99% of the time using BaconReader, and have for about a decade. I'm just not going to comment there any more, and I don't enjoy engaging when I can't respond. Since June, I've only gone to Reddit from Google search results, and then left immediately after.
It's expected that losing a small percentage of users has a massive impact on the quantity and quality of created content, when those leaving are disproportionately power users.
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Well with Reddit at least, it didn't make the company change their course.
Which is fine, it's their company/product to ruin if they want to. But now lemmy is taking off because they did that, and thats great.