I was at about 12 when I left
Thank you for the link. Any guides to making this work? I’m a bit confused because I downloaded the exe, but it won’t run so I’m not sure what to do, even after reading the directions on the github.
Just got mine today. I’m not sure on the request date - I did it from a comment on here that said we should flood Reddit with GDPR requests. However, I’m going to guess somewhere around the week of the blackout 6/12. Does anyone know if there’s a way to tell what your request date was?
Submitted: 2023-06-14 (aprox.)
Received: 2023-7-10
Account created: 2012-02-27
I think it will be useful for deleting my account’s comments since it has all the links to the comments. Also, kinda cathartic having all this archived personally since I will be deleting/altering all my comments soon, then deleting my account.
I mean, I’m pro-choice and I downvoted you because you would rather troll this person and add to the negativity than state your case. I downvoted them too, for the record.
I understand what you’re saying, but in a general sense, a person with good “Reputation Points” can be seen as contributing positively in the communities they are in. Even posting a controversial opinion and getting downvoted to hell (which I have done before on reddit) won’t kill a person’s Reputation Points / Karma. I’m still torn on whether it’s a positive or not, but it can definitely used as an indicator of whether a person is being a positive member of the site.
However, @PositiveNoise brings up some of the negative points as well. Another being that it reinforces an echo chamber of ideas and stifles discussion, with unpopular but well-fashioned arguments being downvoted because they’re disliked, not because they’re harmful. And further, repost bots got tons of karma on reddit, upvoted by people who didn’t see it the first time, which reduces the quality of the sub / community / magazine by burying OC that couldn’t compete against an already proven successful picture / tweet / meme / etc.
It’s a conversation. There are arguments for both sides imo.
This is so sad. It’s a story as old as time, a pretty woman fleecing someone for their money, but it’s gotten so much easier, and less traceable - meaning scammers get away with it and continue to do it over and over.
I’m not touting it, it’s a decent way to make sure that an account is reputable and behaving in a way conducive to the principles of the communities it’s participating in - “upvotes” means people like the things they are posting and saying which means they are good users. It’s just a little …familiar.
Reputation Points.
Karma?
considering they’ll probably also receive considerable hate for even contemplating the decision.
Honestly, when Christian first brought up “maybe subscriptions for Apollo to offset API costs,” I was fine with that. I get that we were receiving a service for free that cost the company money, and I was fine with paying a reasonable amount for that. I just don’t get why they had to make the costs so unreasonable that even subscription based wouldn’t cut it.
Then why they so expensive tho?
I found one of my fave communities on kbin, and it wasn’t active. So I am posting and checking for new posts every day to help it grow. I understand how you feel, but if you want it to happen you should try to be the change.
Which means today is the last day to use it.
(Worth noting that the vast majority of markdown in the value of Reddit and Discord holdings by Fidelity predominantly occurred last year.)
Oh, that means there’s more room to move down.
Me too. RIP two best apps. Reddit is dead to me.
And didn’t they tell him there would be no major API changes, specifically in terms of cost “in 2023”?
“As an AI language model”
As someone who uses ChatGPT frequently, the placement of this phrase is suspect imo.
I freelanced for a nonprofit using Upwork. I’m going to be honest, I’ve not done any other freelance work, but I did see it had a job board.