They don’t even want you to use the website I don’t think. They’ve even done experiments where they blocked people from using the mobile website. The more they want me to use their app, the more I want to avoid Reddit all together.

  • Stumblinbear
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    2 years ago

    A platform’s development is entirely in the hands of its userbase. If the users stay on the platform longer due to a change, they’ll make that change and keep it. It just so happens that humans like what humans like, so all social media tries to cater to the same things that humans like, which leads them to implementing the same features because it drives engagement. It’s a trend towards mediocrity.

    • kalipike@lemmy.one
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      2 years ago

      I understand the logical concept here but struggle to really get it. As platforms do this homogenization, I lose interest in all of them. I’d far rather have several platforma that do one or two things really, really well instead of a bunch of platforms that do everything, but poorly.

      I like your comment about a trend toward mediocrity!

      • Stumblinbear
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        2 years ago

        Oh sure, they push away some subset of users, but there are large swaths of the population that it appeals to. Significantly more than it annoys.