By: Reign Johnson
Great article, and I really do think this is a positive thing for Reddit – admins of sub-reddits aren’t going to start taking crap from people regardless of how many users get on the platform lol
View ArticleBy: Jared Elick
Wait, coming out party? Aren’t they one of the top 10 websites for traffic on the internet? And, I’m pretty sure Reddit is mainstream. I don’t know that I know anyone under 30 who hasn’t at least heard...
View ArticleBy: Yuriy Melnik
Yeah, this is very far from a coming out party, Reddit has been popular for far longer than 18 months.
View ArticleBy: Christina Warren
Under 30 is the key here. Think of all the people — who are OVER 30 who have never heard of Reddit — just as they’d never heard of Twitter or Facebook. The point isn’t that this will make the site...
View ArticleBy: Christina Warren
As I said to Jared — it’s not about becoming popular, it’s about becoming visible to the “mainstream” — the “establishment” – think CNN, The Today Show, Good Morning America, etc. That’s a big shift.
View ArticleBy: JamEs Harris
I just don’t see how Reddit is uncorruptable. I’m not sure how the mechanics of Reddit work in relation to how Digg works/worked, but I sure know that system got subverted quite heavily. The whole Digg...
View ArticleBy: Christina Warren
A few things — first, Subreddits are controlled by moderators — usually the people that created the subreddit or have achieved the most support from the community. They dictate the rules of what can...
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