So, today Reddit API changes are officially implemented and 3rd party is dead.

Coincidentally, Twitter has implemented a read limit on non verified accounts.

And remember all through 2022 any article written about META was about how much money they spent and failed building a venture into Web3?

Ever since the takeover of the bird by Elon, the hair on the back of my neck rose up. I was taken back to the days of the old DD that spoke of total social media shutdown before MOASS. Back then, anytime Reddit servers burped you could rush to Gagnam Style on YouTube and see fresh comments screaming moass. Later WuTang C.R.E.A.M.

Point is, a picture was painted of immediate, total blackout. This isn’t the case. Same with the process of MOASS altogether. It’s slow. It’s been happening, in fact, per continuous DD, we are in it right now. The argument can be made that it was begun as far back as 2020 with our favourite Not-A-Cat.

After Elon bought the bird, the walls between us all began to rise. Previously organic spread and engagement was penned into tiny echo chambers. And his continued promotion of DOGE, seems now like little more than a “Point and laugh at the clown” charade. What better way to discredit Web3 and drill the seed of “Fake silly money” than by having the worlds richest man touting the world’s OG meme coin.

At the same time, META was being absolutely thrashed publicly over its venture into Web3 and the metaverse. And throughout 2022 the META ticker saw insane sell/short pressure to add impact to narrative. Now, I’m NO advocate for Meta and Zucc, but they are a massively influential platform with the potential to “Normalize” metaverses and NFTs and onboard millions of people globally. I believe this was a massive threat to those short GME and a way to tack on GameStops own venture into the NFT marketplace and have it dismissed by association.

Before the end of 2022 the rhetoric around NFT, and Crypto was now fully within the public sphere. And only fearful, or mocking mentions remained. CoughFTX

The only thing left was to stop the lightning rod of self and community education around the movements of TradFi institutions. Too many people were watching and learning and reporting. Social media has allowed us to communicate ideas and information, and for that information to spread rapidly. It gets broken down to understandable and transferrable slices even for the most lay minded of us.

There is no bone in my body that could believe that nearly all the biggest social platforms to ever exist would downturn so sharply, all within 18 months of each other, and all post sneeze.

They all shared a common thread: The masses were learning about Web3 and the ability to own your own digital identity, assets, and money. We were learning that we didn’t need the middleman.

As soon as the Web3 hate wave simmered and the chatter waned a bit, BlackRock and Fidelity start fresh BTC ETFs and begin to buy up large amounts.

And here we are. At the precipice of it all. On a federated Chat board. Still buying. Still DRSing.

Can’t Stop. Won’t Stop.


Edit:Add-on


It’s when you look at the business model of these companies that the point really sticks.

Users>Engagement>advertisement

Harvest data>Algo crunch>more engagment>More advertisement

They don’t just want more engagment, they NEED engagement. It’s their entire operation. These companies have spent BILLIONS developing and studying every possible way to keep you engaged. They need more users, spending more time, providing more data points, for deeper engagement, for more advertising.

Advertisers are the client, YOU are the product. They NEED product.

So why such insane moves to ACTIVELY drive product away? It’s inherently opposite of their core models.

Now they seem to want less reach, they want a smaller pool, and tighter narrative moderation.

I believe for Reddit in particular, the moderators were the true targets. They will be replaced with new people willing to steer content their way. And if they lose users, there’s that much less moderation that needs to be done.

In a cost>risk>reward equation, what can possibly be considered the lesser risk against losing a substantial crop of users?

  • Chives@lemmy.whynotdrs.orgM
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    1 year ago

    Love to see this conversation cropping up on this instance. Thank you!

    There is a anti-censorship community which might also be a great home for this, but considering the ethic and motivation behind the DRS movement, this is also a fine home.

    The social networks which monopolize our conversation today and have created the data economy which drives their design can’t last in the coming social environment. A userbase developing a more robust and nuanced understanding of how the platforms operate - through learning about web3 innovations and open source options - will not stay with the old guard.

    Platforms like Lemmy will only improve. Platforms like Mastodon will only improve.

    The people deserve a place to speak freely and it was never given to us. Naturally, we have made our own.

    • Shucks@lemmy.caOP
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      1 year ago

      We’ve got to keep these conversations in as many places as possible. I’m a bit contrarian to the thought that moving GME chat to new spaces is a bad thing or “fracturing”

      These are topics that need to be in as many places as possible! Those in power LOVE the fact that we all gather in one dark corner.

      We need those fuckers running around like the little Dutch Boy trying to shut down convos in more places than they can manage.

      Thanks for the instance! If you know of any other instances or communities relating to DRS or GME, large or small, please share.

      Maybe even index all known communities in the sticky and we can really find each other.

      I came to Lemmy originally for

      GMECanada

      which I found on r/gmejungle

      • jersan@lemmy.whynotdrs.org
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        1 year ago

        I tend to agree with this view, that we build resilience by increasing our presence across multiple platforms. The fediverse offers the best possible path forward because it will be much harder for Wall Street incumbents to use their influence to shut us down.

        More fediverse instances creates more resiliency. Chop off one head, more heads will grow. this is why I created gmehydra.org, to keep track of fediverse instances that are suitable locations for GameStop investors, places where we can continue to publicly have the very important conversations about GameStop and DRS that are increasingly censored elsewhere.

  • Bakesale@lemmy.whynotdrs.org
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    1 year ago

    That was my first thought today with Twitter being down/having that post limit. Limiting unverified users to a few hundred views a day is wild. It does seem like a strange coincidence that all of this has happened in the last 18 months.

  • pigUw@gmestock.com
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    1 year ago

    A decentralized world is what we need. The family of technologies that enable decentralization promises to bring us new levels of financial freedom, personal data sovereignty and a wealth of opportunities.

  • AfricanExpansionist@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    I have considered something similar. I don’t think it’s conscious coordination. Because Musk tried to back out if buying the Bird and was blocked from doing so. And Reddit isn’t losing all its users, just those who use better apps to engage with it.

    I think your suspicion about the mods is closer to the target, but it’s severe self-sabotage to wholesale remove/replace the people who make your site usable at no financial cost to the company.

    More like, when the system encounters things beyond its control or understanding, its survival needs usually coincide with profit motive. Social media platforms with general pseudo-anonymity and broad public reach are a threat to the system, as evidenced by Superstonk, etc. As the economy turns and easy money is not so easy anymore, their profits dry up and now these companies have to slaughter the cow that gave milk if they want to survive. The incidental benefit is that our platform, that enabled communities to form spontaneously, now can destroy those communities and still make money (at least for a while). And if it’s gone out of business, the system doesn’t care. The system doesn’t care about spez or Reddit or Twitter or even Musk.

  • Latman3@lemmy.whynotdrs.org
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    1 year ago

    I had a tinfoil hunch back in 2011 after the North London riots (mostly organised on BBM) when BlackBerry Messenger went down for a day or so soon afterwards that it was being adapted for someone to spy/ manipulate/ control. I now think this even more after all the changes you’ve mentioned. SS and Reddit in general has been getting worse for ages but is now totally gone to the dogs. Hopefully we can stay here for a while before we are attacked and manipulated. Whilst I don’t agree with rioting I do believe in freedom of speech which is not just being threatened but will soon change people’s lives if CeFi is allowed to be implemented by the WEF etc.

    • Shucks@lemmy.caOP
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      1 year ago

      Absolutely, if there is any sort of centralisation in any way, it can be corrupted. Corporations will always chase the money or avoid funding being pulled. We have seen time and time again the price can always be met. Someone is always willing to bend against the greater good.

      The only way forward is decentralised. Full, non-negotiable ownership of our assets, our communication, and our rights.

      And of course, our GME shares :)