HomeNewsTechnologyReddit’s Chief says he wants it to ‘Grow Up.’ Will its community let it?

Reddit’s Chief says he wants it to ‘Grow Up.’ Will its community let it?

As the social media site matures, its users and moderators have made their displeasure about corporate changes known, putting the company into a bind.

June 27, 2023 / 12:30 IST
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Reddit, an 18-year-old site that was part of an early wave of social networking, has been trying to “grow up,” Huffman has said in interviews.
Reddit had just introduced changes that sharply increased its fees for independent developers who build apps using the company’s data.

For the past 11 years, Bucky has put time and effort into stewarding and guiding dozens of communities on Reddit, the sprawling internet message board.

As a “moderator” of roughly 80 different topic-based forums, Bucky — who goes by “BuckRowdy” on Reddit and who asked that his full name not be used to prevent online harassment — and others like him are essential to growing and maintaining the social media site, which is one of the internet’s biggest destinations for online discussion.

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Until two weeks ago, when Bucky revolted.

Reddit had just introduced changes that sharply increased its fees for independent developers who build apps using the company’s data. Steve Huffman, Reddit’s chief executive, positioned the move partly as a way to shore up the company’s finances as it heads toward a long-awaited initial public offering.