by workerdee on 7/31/15, 9:04 PM with 24 comments
by 27182818284 on 7/31/15, 9:55 PM
Its value has decreased substantially to me with time. My answer to this would have been very different years ago, but now the site is too full of what I consider to be mediocre content that seems weighted really high. For example common expressions used over and over like "nature you scary" should be given a huge penalty hit. For goodness sake, looking at the site in an incognito window right now not only is a story on the frontpage twice, it is the same URL with one different query parameter.
by Yadi on 7/31/15, 10:20 PM
I'm a freelancer consultant and I get decent clients reaching out to me from Reddit.
I read about CompSci and Machine Learning almost on daily basis and the subreddits that I visit help me on that stand point a lot.
But here is the deal! People Love freaking drama and some thrive on it. So whenever there is a 0.1% of drama it gets amplified.
Also one other thing! I respect the HN community, but I've seen harsher feedback & more harassment here than Reddit.
PS: I'm a 5 years club member on Reddit.
by yetanotheracc on 7/31/15, 9:44 PM
$500 a month for a solution that would make me do something semi-productive instead of spending time on those websites.
by jpindar on 8/1/15, 12:53 AM
How much? Expensive enough to discourage those who have nothing to say but memes.
by 1arity on 8/3/15, 1:48 AM
I'd recharge every now and then so I could keep commenting and voting. ( 1 cent per vote, 2 cents to comment, 5 cents to down vote ( and downvotee gets it ) ), and penalties ranging in 10s - 1000s of dollars based on severity of misbehaviour. Some kind of judicial review system would also work to establish consistency.
by daviross on 8/1/15, 3:21 AM
by ABach8 on 8/1/15, 4:11 AM
Although I do believe that Reddit is a very established and well liked website that would still see success if they charged a subscription fee, just not on the same scale of popularity that they currently do.
by stephengillie on 7/31/15, 9:06 PM
They charged $3 a month or $24 a year. Considering I pay Amazon $80 a year for a service I barely use, I should be willing to pay a community about that much.
by miguelrochefort on 8/2/15, 4:00 PM
I would make it free for contributors, and paid for lurkers (i.e., monetize karma).
by afridi on 7/31/15, 9:22 PM
by jordsmi on 8/1/15, 3:19 PM
If I was going to pay just for there become a free alternative elsewhere, no.
by ErikRogneby on 7/31/15, 10:10 PM
by kentt on 7/31/15, 11:00 PM
by nonkool on 8/1/15, 11:01 AM
by spacemanmatt on 8/1/15, 12:05 PM
by Pr0ducer on 7/31/15, 10:05 PM
by andrewmcwatters on 7/31/15, 11:45 PM
by anon3_ on 8/2/15, 1:07 AM
Take a view at the attitude of the current admins:
> Well, now she's gone (you did it reddit!), and /u/spez has the moral authority as a co-founder to move ahead with the purge. We tried to let you govern yourselves and you failed, so now The Man is going to set some Rules. Admittedly, I can't say I'm terribly upset.
source: http://www.reddit.com/r/announcements/comments/3dautm/conten...
How would you feel if Microsoft Word started criticizing people based on the content they written? This is a thing?
Reddit was just a tool. The admins need to step out of the way. I don't care if there are "creepy" reddits.
The entitled and pompous attitude of admins is so elitist it's sick. You're a forum. You're not gods. You're not priests.