Agree but they lost good opportunities I think by not properly engaging with people like the Apollo developer. Someone who evidently understood their need to monetize their API etc but instead of thinking what's reasonable they seemed to have pivoted to crazy.
There was surely a halfway house?
And if Reddit does make positive changes those same passive users who believe anything corporations tell them (the type who call everyone else idiots because they don't understand business) will laud the charges and say how great Reddit is for making them.
This happens so often in tech. "Company X should never change' becomes 'i love company X because they've improved!'
People can be weirdly aggressive in how they align with their favorite corporate 3rd parties.