this post was submitted on 16 Jun 2023
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I'm sure no one here needs to be convinced that /u/spez is duplicitous, but just to put some evidence behind it. For context, Christian wrote an extremely detailed post, with citations, explaining his side of things.
In April, everyone was assured that it wouldn't be comically expensive like Twitter's. And then when it came and was almost the same as Twitter, everyone at reddit sort of just shrugged and said, as Steve did, that the price is the price.
Christian actually did an excellent job of drilling down into the numbers behind that "pay to cover their costs" assertion, and reddit eventually admitted that what they were talking about was "opportunity costs." Not anything it was costing reddit, but the idea that they could be making this amount of money more if these third-party apps didn't exist.
Christian showed evidence of reaching out several times to try to work it out and being refused.
Emphasis is mine; I wanted to quote just the bolded part but it felt misleading to isolate it without providing the context. But that quote is clearly absurd. Having a "competing product" access your API is, for reddit as well as many other companies, a primary reason to publish an API.
And again, Christian got reddit to admit that the numbers they were asking for were not at all based on what it was costing them to provide the API, but that plus a quite large "opportunity cost" of money they felt they would be making if Apollo didn't exist.
This is part of a very weird section of the interview, too long to quote, where spez asserts that reddit was kind enough to allow 3rd-party reddit apps to exist even though it was costing them money, whereas all his competitors (Facebook, Snap, etc) have banned them. That's actually not true -- what their competitors did was simply make apps that weren't ass in the first place (as well as, in general, make money). So the whole issue, of this booming market for 3rd-party apps that weren't terrible, never existed in the first place.
So he's right that it's a uniquely (or at least exceptionally) reddit problem, but wrong on why.
I mean, $1 per user per month for a widely-used app is a lot. Christian explained how a lot of his users pre-pay up front for a year, and the actual costs his company was going to incur and how it would affect them, and offered to take on even the exact costs reddit was asking for if he just had a few months to figure out how to do it without killing his business, and they stopped taking his calls.
I don't know man, the whole interview just made me irritated.