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by june_twenty 1100 days ago
Sync had an awesome redesign of their app recently but ruined it by embedding ads into it. Some of the ads are even animated when reading the comments. As a result, I don't feel bad for the developer of Sync - they had it coming really.
5 comments

That's a poor assessment as you're expecting pro features for nothing. Their decision to include adverts does not make them deserving of this.
Not only adverts - animated adverts. They are serving data from a free API and looking to piggy back off it. Not only is my assessment not "poor", it is too kind to the developers.
I truly don't understand the narrative from the past few days.

These third parties lived by serving their own ads instead of reddit's. They paid $0 to reddit yet made a very good living themselves (at least for the top ones like apollo and sync).

And yet the narrative is now that they provided tremendous value to reddit by providing them with exposure (lol!) and that their users were creating most of reddit's content (which is most certainly false) and that reddit are monsters who duped them.

Let's be real here. Those developers had a good run, they made a living of of reddit's content for a decade. Bravo. That was nice. But they all knew it was going to end one day ("Is it fair for Apollo to not pay reddit?" was a common question on the apollo sub, so even the USERS knew it wasn't a fully bidirectional relationship).

The problem isn't that they're expecting third party clients to pay for API usage.

The problem is that their prices are completely outlandish and multiple orders of magnitude more than they would've made of the same users had they used the official app.

On top of that, the transition period for third party apps to somehow implement a way to make these ridiculous sums of money is 30 days. That's just impossible.

This completely writes off the difficulty of and time required to build a great mobile app. If it was simple and easy Reddit would have just made their own instead of buying out an existing one.
And they shouldn't expect any public API even at a fair rate. No other platform does it at this point.
And they’re not and they’re shutting down?
I agree & I'm glad we've come to a resolution
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It's irrelevant to the topic, but I actively dislike Reddit and would be happy for it to die. I use old school forums more than anything else online. Reddit killed those.
You could've just bought the pro version for a handful of bucks to get rid of the ads...
Would it be better if they ONLY had the paid version of the app instead of offering both paid and ad-supported versions? To me, it seems ideal to give users that choice. To me the $3 or whatever was worth it to support a good app (even if the dev sometimes goes AWOL)
The official Reddit client is worse.

I am sad I won't be continuing to use Sync

The only good official Reddit interface is old.reddit.com really.

I can’t wait for the SPA cargo cult to end.

SPA?
Single Page Application
Were the ads a necessary evil in response to the API pricing changes?
They were present long before API pricing was announced.