Reddit still has tons of useful content and I'm expecting to be clicking on it or some sort of archive in the future. I won't be active of the platform in any way but there's still value in the content they're now using as leverage.
I was playing Diablo 4 and saw my SO (who doesn't play a lot) looking at my screen and suddenly recoiling when I opened the Paragon boards.
I thought about it and put together a way to stream my PC to the TV. Result: we've played Minecraft Dungeons local coop for a large part of the weekend and it's been fantastic.
This is a Theranos level of fake it till you make it: lie about where the product is used, who approves it and how well it works and hope the reality catches up quicker than clients.
It's pretty clear the technology is not ready for this, and once again regulators and prosecutors won't move a finger to prevent potential harm.