- Thread Author
- #1
Reddit’s down again. No logins, no threads, no access. If your community lives there, you’re screwed.
Let this serve as a reminder that if you're building your community on Reddit, Discord, or Facebook Groups, you're building on borrowed land. The moment they go offline, change the rules, or decide you're a problem, you lose everything.
Reddit’s been pushed hard by Google lately. It’s dominating search results. AI models are hoovering up its content. The platform’s chasing an IPO, which means more ads, more paywalls, more data scraping, and less stability.
People act like Reddit is the internet. It isn’t. It’s a single website with a voting system that rewards snarky one-liners and groupthink. Mods can nuke your post or ban your account without warning. There’s no consistency, no ownership, and no real appeal process. Just vibes and power trips.
So if you're serious about your community, stop giving it away.
Own your platform. Run a forum. Host it yourself. That way:
If Reddit going down today has left you stranded, think about what happens if it goes down permanently.
Build something you own. Stop trusting corporations with what matters.
Let this serve as a reminder that if you're building your community on Reddit, Discord, or Facebook Groups, you're building on borrowed land. The moment they go offline, change the rules, or decide you're a problem, you lose everything.
Reddit’s been pushed hard by Google lately. It’s dominating search results. AI models are hoovering up its content. The platform’s chasing an IPO, which means more ads, more paywalls, more data scraping, and less stability.
People act like Reddit is the internet. It isn’t. It’s a single website with a voting system that rewards snarky one-liners and groupthink. Mods can nuke your post or ban your account without warning. There’s no consistency, no ownership, and no real appeal process. Just vibes and power trips.
So if you're serious about your community, stop giving it away.
Own your platform. Run a forum. Host it yourself. That way:
- You set the rules.
- You keep the data.
- You’re not one outage away from a blank screen.
- You don’t rely on ad-driven algorithms or unpaid volunteer mods.
- You can back it up, move it, archive it, and fix it.
If Reddit going down today has left you stranded, think about what happens if it goes down permanently.
Build something you own. Stop trusting corporations with what matters.