• dhork@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    It’s probably not even 5%, but it was a part of the site that felt so strongly about their engagement that they preferred specific apps to use for that engagement. And we are seeing that evicting that small percentage had an huge effect on the quality of the place, providing the content that kept the rest engaged.

    I know people who are casual Reddit users and don’t care at all about the API access. But they can see that Reddit has jumped the shark. Content is far less interesting to them, so they are spending less time there.

    • jivandabeastA
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      1 year ago

      Also 5% of a userbase in the hundreds of millions is NOT a small number. And it’s not JUST them who are upset its their peers on the platform who would look at that and say “hmm that IS bullshit”