The great Reddit blackout: Why your favorite subreddit went dark

Whether you’re an hardcore redditor or a classic lurker, there’s a high chance you’ve been affected by the blackout that saw some 8,000 subreddits with the cumulative number of subscribers of more than 2.6 billion going dark.

Some of the most popular subreddits, such as r/funny with over 30 million users, went private on June 12 to protest Reddit’s move to charge third-party developers for using its API. The protest was to last two days and end on June 14, but some subreddits, like r/iPhone, said that they would not return unless a “a reasonable resolution is proposed.”

Thousands of subreddits went dark on June 12

How Reddit turned its own community on itself

Before we dive into the current drama, let’s rewind a bit and see how it all started. In April, Reddit announced that it would start charging for access to its API (application programming interface), which is a way for other apps to tap into Reddit’s data and features. This move followed Twitter’s footsteps, which had cut off free access to its API and introduced paid tiers, with an enterprise tier aimed at developers starting at a whopping $42,000 per month.

At the time Reddit claimed that the reason for charging for its API was to rebuff the “largest companies in the world” like OpenAI, Google, and Microsoft who scrape Reddit for data to use it in AI training. “Crawling Reddit, generating value and not returning any of that value to our users is something we have a problem with,” Reddit CEO Steve Huffman told the New York Times. “It’s a good time for us to tighten things up,” he added.

Indeed, WebText2, a dataset which was used to train OpenAI’s GPT-3.5 model was revealed to consist of web pages with high rating or karma scraped from Reddit. We have long criticized the practice of Big Tech where they gobble up publicly accessible information from the Internet, without caring about whether it’s copyrighted or not or if it contains sensitive personal data, for the supposedly higher goal of training AI. So, when Reddit aired its grievances against the insatiable appetite for “free” data on part of big corporations, the grievances themselves were, in our opinion, quite valid.

Apollo is crash-landing

It is how Reddit chose to enforce its new developer terms with regards to relatively small third-party developers (compared to the mighty Big Tech monsters) that has raised questions.

All hell broke loose in early June when Christian Selig, the solo developer of a popular ad-free Reddit client Apollo, exposed Reddit API’s pricing plans in a blog post. He claimed that he would have to fork out about $1.7 million per month, or $20 million per year to keep using the Reddit API at the current rate.

Apollo is free, but it also offers two paid options: a one-time payment of $4.99 or a monthly fee of $1.49. However, Selig said that even if he only kept the paid subscribers, he would not be able to afford Reddit’s rates. Reddit later confirmed it would charge 24 cents for every 1,000 times API calls are made by an app. Selig calculated that an average Apollo user makes 10,600 API calls per month, which means that each user would cost him $2.50 per month, putting him “in the red.”

Selig accused Reddit of breaking its promise to come up with pricing for its API that would be based “in reality.” Apparently, it’s not that he did not see the paid API tier coming — in fact, Apollo community members did so as far back as three years ago.

Apollo saw the paid API tiers coming

After all, Apollo does not show Reddit ads, which, you guessed it right, are the primary source of income for the platform by a wide margin. The problem is rather that Reddit has become too greedy, according to Selig. He estimated that Reddit makes about $1.40 per year, or 12 cents per month, from each user, based on public data on Reddit’s revenue and user base. This means that Selig would have to pay Reddit 20 times more than what Reddit makes from each user, if his estimates are correct.

The irony is that high, by any standards, fees that Reddit plans to charge third-party developers from July 1 onwards are ones that arguably only the large corporations it claims to challenge would be able to afford. Apollo announced that it would shut down before the new API pricing kicks in, as did several other third-party clients like Reddit is Fun and Sync.

Reddit clumsily attempts damage control

Reddit faced huge backlash from the community over its new demands and tried to do some damage control. To assuage some of the concerns, Reddit said that over 90% apps would still be able to use the API for free as long as they did not exceed usage limits. Reddit also spared some “non-commercial, accessibility-focused apps and tools” from having to pay the fee. However, some developers of these apps and tools expressed concerns that Reddit could change its mind at any time. “I think it’s very reasonable to be concerned about Reddit’s current trajectory, and nobody can know for sure how long the exemption will last,” wrote the developers of RedReader, an app that helps blind people to screenread Reddit.

In another attempt to make amends with redditors, Huffman held a Q&A session, where he refused to backpedal on the unpopular changes, but admitted that the deadline to switch to the paid API plans was “tight” and said he would “continue talking” with other third-party apps. Though, when a user questioned Reddit’s apparent pursuit of profit over community (surprise, surprise), Huffman did not argue, while also taking a swipe at third-party clients who, he claimed, were living the high life profitable.

Reddit CEO has insisted on making access to its API a paid product

Why is Reddit doing this: our theory

One must wonder why Reddit would pit its community against itself to suffer arguably one of the most steep falls from grace in recent internet history. The most likely reason behind that seemingly self-destructive move is that Reddit wants to cash in on its ad revenue.

Third-party clients like Apollo or RIF (Reddit is Fun) do not display Reddit ads, but they may have their own ads. For example, Apollo would occasionally annoy its users with its own product ads, however, one could argue that these types of ads are relatively harmless.

In their farewell message, the RIF developers revealed that as part of the changes Reddit was “blocking ads in third-party apps, which make up the majority of RIF’s revenue”. As we noted earlier, ad sales make up the lion’s share of Reddit’s total revenue. Although ad revenue dwarfs the money Reddit makes selling premium subscriptions, the number of premium subscribers who can enjoy the forum ad-free has been slowly growing. Reddit Premium costs $5.99 per month or $49.99 per year, which makes it more expensive than Apollo’s paid plans, for example.

Considering that Reddit is trying to boost its ad business, it makes sense that it may want to kill popular Reddit clients that take away its ad revenue while also selling subscriptions (some of them, at least).

What to take away from all of this

Charging for API access is not inherently a bad thing, as it can help cover the costs of maintaining and improving the service. Third-party clients, either by placing their own ads or selling subscriptions, or both, were profiting off Reddit’s data without compensating it. That was hardly a sustainable model in the long run.

But it’s how you do it, not what you do, that matters most. Third-party applications, including Reddit clients, were apparently blindsided by the changes, especially the API pricing, and given a very tight deadline. Moreover, the way Reddit treated some developers, suggesting they pay exorbitant fees they could not possibly afford and offering no more flexible pricing options, is not a good look for Reddit.

We hope that Reddit has not closed the door on client apps who are willing to pay a fair share for using its data. Hopefully they can find a compromise that allows both Reddit and third-party developers to thrive. Most likely, this should involve Reddit receiving compensation from third-party clients for using its data such as through API fees, but in a reasonable amount: this could benefit both Reddit and developers, as well as users who enjoy the apps.

喜歡這篇文章嗎?
20,760 20760 使用者評論
極好的!

AdGuard for Windows

Windows 版 AdGuard 不只是廣告封鎖程式,它是集成所有讓您享受最佳網路體驗的主要功能的多用途工具。其可封鎖廣告和危險網站,加速網頁載入速度,並且保護兒童的線上安全。
透過下載該程式,您接受授權協定的條款
閱讀更多
AdGuard for Windows 7.21 版本,14 天的試用期
20,760 20760 使用者評論
極好的!

AdGuard for Mac

Mac 版 AdGuard 是一款獨一無二的專為 MacOS 設計的廣告封鎖程式。除了保護使用者免受瀏覽器和應用程式裡惱人廣告的侵擾外,應用程式還能保護使用者免受追蹤、網路釣魚和詐騙。
透過下載該程式,您接受授權協定的條款
閱讀更多
AdGuard for Mac 2.17 版本,14 天的試用期
20,760 20760 使用者評論
極好的!

AdGuard for Android

Android 版的 AdGuard 是一個用於安卓裝置的完美解決方案。與其他大多數廣告封鎖器不同,AdGuard 不需要 Root 權限,提供廣泛的應用程式管理選項。
透過下載該程式,您接受授權協定的條款
閱讀更多
掃描下載
可以使用任何一款 QR 碼閱讀器
AdGuard for Android 4.11 版本,14 天的試用期
20,760 20760 使用者評論
極好的!

AdGuard for iOS

用於 iPhone 和 iPad 的最佳 iOS 廣告封鎖程式。AdGuard 可以清除 Safari 中的各種廣告,保護個人隱私,並加快頁面載入速度。iOS 版 AdGuard 廣告封鎖技術確保最高質量的過濾,並讓使用者同時使用多個過濾器。
透過下載該程式,您接受授權協定的條款
閱讀更多
掃描下載
可以使用任何一款 QR 碼閱讀器
AdGuard for iOS 版本 4.5
20,760 20760 使用者評論
極好的!

AdGuard 內容阻擋器

AdGuard 內容阻擋器可以全面阻止所有支援內容封鎖技術的行動瀏覽器中的廣告,目前包括 Samsung Internet 瀏覽器和 Yandex 瀏覽器。雖然其功能相比 Android 版 AdGuard 有所限制,但它完全免費、安裝簡單且封鎖高效。
透過下載該程式,您接受授權協定的條款
閱讀更多
AdGuard 內容阻擋器 版本 2.8
20,760 20760 使用者評論
極好的!

AdGuard 瀏覽器擴充功能

AdGuard 是有效地封鎖於全部網頁上的所有類型廣告之最快的和最輕量的廣告封鎖擴充功能!為您使用的瀏覽器選擇 AdGuard,然後取得無廣告的、快速的和安全的瀏覽。
AdGuard 瀏覽器擴充功能 版本 5.1
20,760 20760 使用者評論
極好的!

AdGuard 助理

AdGuard 桌面應用程式的配套瀏覽器擴充功能。它為瀏覽器提供了自訂的元件阻止的功能,將網站列入允許清單或傳送報告等功能。
AdGuard 助理 版本 1.4
20,760 20760 使用者評論
極好的!

AdGuard Home

AdGuard Home 是一款以網路為基礎的解決方案,用於封鎖廣告和追蹤器。只需在您的路由器上安裝一次,即可涵蓋家庭網路上的所有裝置——無需另外安裝客戶端軟體。這對於經常威脅您隱私的各類物聯網裝置來說尤為重要。
AdGuard Home 版本 0.107
20,760 20760 使用者評論
極好的!

AdGuard Pro iOS 版

AdGuard Pro iOS 版預置全部進階廣告封鎖防護功能,提供與 AdGuard iOS 版付費版完全相同的工具集。其卓越之處在於:不僅能精準封鎖 Safari 瀏覽器內的廣告,更支援自訂的 DNS 設定以精細化防護策略。該產品具備跨瀏覽器與應用的全方位廣告封鎖能力,有效防護兒童遠離不良內容,並全面保障個人資料安全。
透過下載該程式,您接受授權協定的條款
閱讀更多
AdGuard Pro iOS 版 版本 4.5
20,760 20760 使用者評論
極好的!

AdGuard for Safari

我們的 Safari 廣告封鎖程式已成功應對 Apple 強制採用新 SDK 的挑戰。這款 AdGuard 擴充功能旨在讓 Safari 重獲高品質廣告封鎖體驗。
AdGuard for Safari 版本 1.11
20,760 20760 使用者評論
極好的!

AdGuard Android TV 版

Android TV 版 AdGuard 是唯一一款能封鎖廣告、保護隱私並充當智慧電視防火墻的應用程式。取得網路威脅警告,使用安全 DNS,並受益於加密流量。有了安全性和零廣告的使用體驗,使用者就可以盡情享受最喜愛的節目了!
AdGuard Android TV 版 4.11 版本,14 天的試用期
20,760 20760 使用者評論
極好的!

AdGuard Linux 版

AdGuard Linux 版是世界上第一個系統級廣告封鎖器。封鎖廣告和追蹤器,選擇預設過濾器或新增自己的過濾器。管理流程通過命令行介面實現。
AdGuard Linux 版 版本 1.0
20,760 20760 使用者評論
極好的!

AdGuard Temp Mail

免費的臨時電子郵件地址產生器,保持匿名性並保護個人隱私。您的主收件匣中沒有垃圾郵件!
20,760 20760 使用者評論
極好的!

AdGuard DNS

AdGuard DNS 是一種不需要安裝任何的應用程式而封鎖網際網路廣告之極簡單的方式。它易於使用,完全地免費,被輕易地於任何的裝置上設置,並向您提供封鎖廣告、計數器、惡意網站和成人內容之最少必要的功能。
20,760 20760 使用者評論
極好的!

AdGuard Mail

保護個人身份,避免垃圾郵件,並使用我們的別名和臨時電子郵件地址保護收件箱。享受我們的免費電子信箱轉發服務和適用於所有作業系統的應用程式使用體驗。
20,760 20760 使用者評論
極好的!

AdGuard Wallet

一個安全且私密的加密貨幣錢包,讓您完全掌控資產。管理多個錢包,探索上千種加密貨幣以儲存、傳送及兌換。
已開始下載 AdGuard 點擊箭頭所指示的檔案開始安裝 AdGuard。 選擇"開啟"並點擊"確定",然後等待該檔案被下載。在被打開的視窗中,拖曳 AdGuard 圖像到"應用程式"檔案夾中。感謝您選擇 AdGuard! 選擇"開啟"並點擊"確定",然後等待該檔案被下載。在被打開的視窗中,點擊"安裝"。感謝您選擇 AdGuard!
在行動裝置上安裝 AdGuard