Comment on Monday Daily Questions (Newbie Friendly) - Aug 28, 2023
gcgallant@sub.wetshaving.social 1 year ago
It is easy for me to post to r/Wetshaving and to this community, and I have a simple process for posting to Mastodon as well. What’s not easy for me is managing activity across these sites. Assuming that someday much of r/Wetshaving will want to move here, is there an easy way to ease that transition through an app that does consolidation of both Reddit and Lemmy?
PorkButtsNTaters666@sub.wetshaving.social 1 year ago
I believe that you should be able to follow a Lemmy community in mastodon, but I don’t think that reddit allows apps to integrate (easily or at all) with the fediverse. There are apps like geddit that don’t use the reedit API, but that means it’s read only wrt reddit, and it’s not meant as a fediverse client.
gcgallant@sub.wetshaving.social 1 year ago
Thank you. I’ve looked around and haven’t found anything. Since Lemmy looks like reddit but exists in the fediverse I hoped that someone would write an app that supported both the reddit and fediverse APIs to provide a consistent UI for those who want to exist in both seamlessly.
PorkButtsNTaters666@sub.wetshaving.social 1 year ago
It’s unlikely that anyone will write an app using reddit’s API, because this is a huge financial risk (the blackout was about this).
gcgallant@sub.wetshaving.social 1 year ago
You are probably right.
I am aware of Reddit’s change in policy that went into effect in July. $12,000 for 50 million API requests and free for “non-commercial accessibility apps” (Reddit’s term). Since Reddit is a for-profit business and is owned by a company (Advance Publications) that wants to be publicly traded, this all makes sense to me. 50 million API requests is probably a pretty high bar to meet for an app that facilitates a move from Reddit to the Fediverse, and if the app received non-commercial status it would be fine. And an app could use a subscription policy to cover API costs, which some of the Reddit apps have moved to.
From a practical standpoint, I don’t see this as a “huge financial risk”. I see it as a solvable problem. I don’t think there’s enough obvious benefit to motivate a developer to expend the effort, however.