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by lmm 1272 days ago
> Now Reddit (one of the largest sites on the internet) does what Mastodon does and forces new users to choose before using an account.

It doesn't though - creating an account doesn't tie you permanently to a particular subreddit. I would guess, without checking, that they will suggest some subreddits to subscribe to, and if you try to sign up from a particular subreddit's page then maybe it'll subscribe you to that subreddit. But if you joined the wrong subreddit at the start then you're fine - you can unsubscribe from that, and subscribe to another, and your account is still the same account.

1 comments

This is also true of Mastodon. If you join an instance and change your mind you can switch instances and take all your follows/followers/posts etc. with you.

In both situations it is a major interruption to the sign up process and forces you to confront what you want out of the platform before using your account though -- I just wonder if there's anyway around that, Reddit seems to have decided there isn't one.

As far as I understand it (and I may be wrong) this depends on the old server playing fair (and still existing).

It's not like email or a web site where you change your DNS records without any cooperation from the old server.