SAME! Also recommend Alton Brown
One thing I wish these news sites would cover is that it's not only the API changes that people are upset about.
This was just the straw that broke the camels back. It's been a long time coming.
My personal gripes were:
- Corporate astroturfing (this is the #1 reason I left, the entire front-page just felt like r/hailcorporate but nobody is aware)
- Reddit official app served ads in the damn comment section
- Bots of many varieties. Karma farming bots. Politically motivated bots (especially on r/Canada)
- Mod abuse (r/antiwork for instance)
- Censorship (r/fencesitter for instance)
- The stupid NFTs being pushed
Also, the API situation will make it harder to moderate subs without the tools that were previously available
Holy shit
I have nothing against it OP for sharing this, but the headline of this article by PCgamer is super clickbaity, witholding the key info until you give them a click. There was a subreddit called "saved you a click" that was basically taking clickbait headlines and putting the "prize info" in the post title. I wonder if there will be a Lemmy equivalent.
Is anyone here old enough to remember SomethingAwful and communities like that from the early 2000s? Lowtax drama aside, during its hayday the community was the source of so many OG memes. Here's hoping that Lemmy will have that nostalgic feeling.
I thought it was about waterboarding