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Apple subreddit reopens after moderation team threatened with removal

Reddit coerces mods to reopen subreddits

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The Apple subreddit has reopened under duress after a protest about API fees was squashed by threats from the company's CEO to remove the moderation teams of closed subreddits.

Reddit's Data API was updated in April, introducing a premium access tier for developers that offered additional features, increased usage limits, and expanded usage rights. These modifications were met with considerable resistance.

To express their discontent with the API modifications, a multitude of subreddits on Reddit are engaging in a protest by temporarily going dark for a duration of 24 to 48 hours. When a subreddit goes dark, it becomes private and inaccessible to the public, demonstrating unity.

The API changes will make it virtually impossible for third-party Reddit clients to function without paying exorbitant fees. One notable instance involves developer Christian Selig, who announced that the popular app Apollo would shut down on June 30 due to escalated expenses.

With a fee of $0.02 per user for access, he estimated that Apollo would incur an annual cost of approximately $20 million for continued access.

Reddit protests met by threats from CEO

Numerous subreddits, including r/Apple, intended to maintain indefinite privacy for their communities as a protest. But the moderators announced recently that the Apple subreddit is back after Reddit threatened to reopen subreddits against the moderators' will.

"If a moderator team unanimously decides to stop moderating, we will invite new, active moderators to keep these spaces open and accessible to users," the post says. "If there is no consensus, but at least one mod who wants to keep the community going, we will respect their decisions and remove those who no longer want to moderate from the mod team."

Some users are urging moderators to resign in protest, highlighting that the role of a moderator on Reddit is voluntary and unpaid, in contrast to companies such as Facebook that provide compensation for similar positions. As a result, some moderators are indeed taking that course of action.

In a recent interview, Reddit CEO Steve Huffman told The Verge that the company plans to continue charging access to its API, regardless of the protests. He believes that third-party apps unfairly piggyback on Reddit's success, and is apparently unaware that Reddit's success is because of the posts by the users that use the service in all of its forms.



18 Comments

mknelson 9 Years · 1148 comments

"The Apple subreddit has reopened under duress after a protest about API fees was squashed by threats from the company's CEO to remove the moderation teams of closed subreddits."

Did anybody else read that sentence and have to stop and think: "Do they mean Tim Cook?" as Apple is the only company explicitly named by that point in the article.

Anilu_777 8 Years · 579 comments

mknelson said:
"The Apple subreddit has reopened under duress after a protest about API fees was squashed by threats from the company's CEO to remove the moderation teams of closed subreddits."

Did anybody else read that sentence and have to stop and think: "Do they mean Tim Cook?" as Apple is the only company explicitly named by that point in the article.

No, clearly Reddit’s CEO. Many people don’t like the official app. Twitter did a similar thing with client apps, withdrawing their ability to use Twitter’s API. Having third-party apps is a good thing and shows a client is popular but also shows that the official one is sub par. The popular Twitter client Tweetbot made a Mastodon app which is quite popular with users when it was then unable to make a Twitter app. 

anonymouse 15 Years · 6976 comments

The Apple subreddit has reopened under duress after a protest about API fees was squashed by threats from the company's CEO to remove the moderation teams of closed subreddits. 

I believe the word you wanted was 'quashed', not 'squashed'.

torb9h 8 Years · 15 comments

‘and is apparently unaware that Reddit's success is because of the posts by the users that use the service in all of its forms’

Not apparentl at all. Users on third party apps represent a small % of total users. 

StrangeDays 8 Years · 12987 comments

torb9h said:
‘and is apparently unaware that Reddit's success is because of the posts by the users that use the service in all of its forms’

Not apparentl at all. Users on third party apps represent a small % of total users. 

But they represent the power users and mods, who are what enable Reddit’s success. If the mods stand together they have power to affect change.