It’s rare for all of a company’s users to turn against it in such an intense way, but Reddit has managed to alienate all of their users at once. After a recent announcement that the company will no longer be offering their API for third-party apps, users have closed ranks and made the site virtually unusable. This week guest-host Haje Kamps talks with TechCrunch Sr. Reporter Morgan Sung about whether there is room for compromise between the moderators who keep the site running, third-party apps that users love, and the profit-motivated Reddit management team. Articles from the episode:A whistleblower raised safety concerns about OceanGate’s submersible in 2018. Then he was fired.Volkswagen’s breakthrough could spark a battery manufacturing gold rushWhatsApp introduces feature to automatically silence calls from unknown numbersNetflix launches website based on the fictional streaming service from ‘Black Mirror’Hundreds of subreddits plan to go dark indefinitely after Reddit CEO’s internal memoReddit communities adopt alternative forms of protest, as the company threatens action on moderatorsHackers threaten to leak 80GB of confidential data stolen from Reddit The TechCrunch Podcast posts every Friday. Subscribe on Apple, Spotify or wherever you listen to podcasts to be alerted when new episodes drop. Check out the other TechCrunch podcasts: Equity, Found and Chain Reaction. . Credits: The TechCrunch Podcast is produced by Maggie Stamets, hosted by Darrell Etherington, and edited by Kell.
From "The TechCrunch Podcast"
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