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Reddit hasn’t turned a profit in nearly 20 years, but it just filed to go public anyway By Clare Duffy and John Towfighi , CNN 5 minute read ...
Reddit has become known as the place to go for unfiltered answers from real, human users. But as the site celebrates its 20th ...
As it celebrates 20 years, Reddit remains a testament to how important online communities can be in a world increasingly filled with AI slop. Still, Huffman believes Reddit's true value is coming.
For 20 years, Reddit has pitched itself as "the front page of the internet." AI threatens to change that. Watch NBC 5 free wherever you are. WATCH HERE.
Reddit may have lost some users during last year's protests and Reddit's subsequent evolution. But financially, Reddit appears to be right where it wants to be.
Last month, Apollo made seven billion requests, which would mean Selig would need to pay $1.7 million per month or $20 million per year to Reddit to keep the app running. Just got off a call with ...
While Reddit hasn’t officially disclosed its API pricing, Christian Selig, Apollo’s sole developer, says he would have to pay $20 million to keep his app going “as-is” under the new policies.
Apollo, a third-party client for Reddit, could rack up millions of dollars in fees if it decides to comply with the company’s new paid API policy, according to Apollo developer Christian Selig.
Selig estimates it would cost $20 million a year to keep Apollo running. Apollo and most other third-party apps use Reddit's data but don't show Reddit's ads, so the proliferation of third-party ...
Apollo has become one of the most feature-rich and popular Reddit clients over the past years. ... that comes out to ~$1.7 million per month or $20 million per year for Apollo’s API access.
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