Thousands of Reddit communities go dark to protest new fees - Los Angeles Times
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Thousands of Reddit communities go dark to protest new data fees

The Reddit app icon on a smartphone
Social networking forum Reddit is following moves from companies such as Twitter to increase fees in an effort to monetize more of its platform.
(Matt Slocum / Associated Press)
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More than 6,000 communities on the social networking forum Reddit are going dark for 48 hours starting Monday in protest of a fee increase for developers that use the site’s data.

Popular discussion threads, known as subreddits — including r/music, r/art, r/videos, r/gaming, r/science and r/funny — have been set to private mode and some will close indefinitely. Other communities are joining the growing list.

“Closed Indefinitely for Reddit API Policy Change Protest — The musical community of reddit,” a message says on the r/music page, a community to discuss all things music-related.

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Reddit recently increased fees for third-party developers to access its API, or application programming interface. One such company called Apollo, which operates a Reddit browser app for iOS and iPadOS, has said that under the new fee model it would have to pay potentially more than $20 million a year to continue operating.

“Apollo will close down on June 30th. Reddit’s recent decisions and actions have unfortunately made it impossible for Apollo to continue. Thank you so, so much for all the support over the years,” Apollo founder Christian Selig said on Twitter.

Some of San Francisco-based Reddit’s most popular content remained hidden from its users on Friday as the heavily trafficked forum site’s moderators staged a massive protest after the firing of an apparently beloved employee.

July 3, 2015

Reddit, which filed paperwork with the Securities and Exchange Commission in December 2021 for an intended initial public offering that has since stalled, is following moves from companies such as Twitter to increase fees in an effort to monetize more of its platform.

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Reddit founder and Chief Executive Steve Huffman articulated the shift in a New York Times interview published in April.

“The Reddit corpus of data is really valuable,” Huffman said. “But we don’t need to give all of that value to some of the largest companies in the world for free.”

Many companies such as OpenAI and Microsoft have used Reddit conversations in developing and training large text-generated language models for new AI technology such as ChatGPT. Huffman has stated that this data “crawling” is not returning value to Reddit’s users.

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“Reddit needs to be a self-sustaining business, and to do that, we can no longer subsidize commercial entities that require large-scale data use,” Huffman said in a Reddit Ask-Me-Anything about changes to API, noting that Reddit has not made a profit yet.

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