-
22 votes
-
Steve Ballmer was an underrated CEO
13 votes -
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang and the King of Denmark plug in the country's first AI supercomputer – Gefion leverages 1,528 Nvidia H100 AI GPUs
5 votes -
Amazon tells staff to get back in the office
43 votes -
Telegram CEO charged in France for ‘allowing criminal activity’ on messaging app
26 votes -
Telegram messaging app CEO Pavel Durov arrested in France
69 votes -
Nothing CEO Carl Pei gives employees two months to return to office full-time
34 votes -
French authorities arrest Telegram’s CEO
13 votes -
Replika CEO Eugenia Kuyda says it’s okay if we end up marrying AI chatbots
16 votes -
Susan Wojcicki, former YouTube CEO, dies at 56
15 votes -
Some subreddits could be paywalled, hints Reddit CEO
64 votes -
Reddit CEO says Microsoft needs to pay to search the site
46 votes -
Delta CEO says CrowdStrike-Microsoft outage cost the airline $500 million, will seek damages
44 votes -
FOSS funding vanishes from EU's 2025 Horizon program plans. Elimination of most Next Generation Internet funding 'incomprehensible,' says OW2 CEO Pierre-Yves Gibello.
28 votes -
Scarlett Johansson says OpenAI’s Sam Altman would make a good Marvel villain after voice dispute
33 votes -
Iceland's startup scene is punching above its weight – dodging the venture capital doldrums, Frumtak Ventures lands $87M for its fourth fund
5 votes -
Anthropic's CEO on being an underdog
9 votes -
British Library on why it kept it real in communication about ransomware attack
9 votes -
CEO of data privacy company Onerep.com (used by the Mozilla Monitor service), founded dozens of people-search firms
44 votes -
Elon Musk sues OpenAI, Sam Altman for breaching firm’s founding mission
27 votes -
Cloudflare CEO says viral firing video is 'painful': 'We were far from perfect… We don't always get it right'
28 votes -
Substack turns on its ‘Nazis Welcome!’ sign
89 votes -
Charity for profit: Brandfluence/Softgiving, the marketing agency behind some of Twitch's most successful fundraising streams quietly collected 42% of donations
26 votes -
Spotify is the world's biggest music streamer but rarely turns a profit and just cut 17% of its workforce – its business model looks increasingly precarious
59 votes -
Sam Altman will join Microsoft to lead a new advanced Al research team following his ouster from OpenAl, CEO Satya Nadella said
52 votes -
Cybersecurity firm CEO pleads guilty to hacking hospitals to boost his company's business
36 votes -
Emmett Shear becomes interim OpenAI CEO as Sam Altman talks break down
14 votes -
OpenAI announces leadership transition
65 votes -
OpenAI’s new CEO is Twitch co-founder Emmett Shear
5 votes -
OpenAI board in discussions with Sam Altman to return as CEO
45 votes -
Mark Zuckerberg delivers on promise to pour 'gasoline' on Threads growth as the platform regains users while X shrinks
21 votes -
Web Summit chief steps down over Israel remarks
15 votes -
Getty Images CEO Craig Peters has a plan to defend photography from AI | Discussion of Getty's AI image generator and related topics
13 votes -
Daniel Ek says Spotify has no plans to completely ban content created by artificial intelligence from the music streaming platform
3 votes -
Kick revisits moderation policy after CEO laughs at sex worker ‘prank’ stream
18 votes -
Zoom CEO reportedly tells staff: Workers can't build trust or collaborate... on Zoom
52 votes -
Spotify is raising the price of its single-account premium plan for the first time since 2011 and hiking other services as well
65 votes -
Twitter blocks links to rival Threads, while CEO downplays reports of traffic decline
121 votes -
Mark Zuckerberg announces that there has been over five million signups to Meta's Threads in the first four hours
61 votes -
Seven rules for internet CEOs to avoid enshittification
39 votes -
Reddit CEO pledges to not force subreddits to reopen. Admin team then immediately threatens moderators who closed their subreddits with removal.
In this article from The Verge posted today "While the company does “respect the community’s right to protest” and pledges that it won’t force communities to reopen, Reddit also suggests there’s...
In this article from The Verge posted today "While the company does “respect the community’s right to protest” and pledges that it won’t force communities to reopen, Reddit also suggests there’s no need for that"
Ironically mere minutes before this article went live, Reddit admins posted this to /r/modsupport.
"Leaving a community you deeply care for and have nurtured for years is a hard choice, but it is a choice some may need to make if they are no longer interested in moderating that community. If a moderator team unanimously decides to stop moderating, we will invite new, active moderators to keep these spaces open and accessible to users. If there is no consensus, but at least one mod who wants to keep the community going, we will respect their decisions and remove those who no longer want to moderate from the mod team."
This statement not only completely contradicts what was "pledged" by Spez, but is also a very clear threat to subreddit moderators telling them to fall in line or get replaced by someone who will.
More articles that came out today about this subject:
Kotaku: Reddit's CEO Is Just Making Everything Worse
NBC: Reddit CEO slams protest leaders, saying he'll change rules that favor ‘landed gentry’
MacRumors: Reddit Threatens to Remove Moderators From Subreddits Continuing Apollo-Related Blackouts
ARS Technica: As the Reddit war rages on, community trust is the casualty
NPR: Reddit CEO Steve Huffman: 'It's time we grow up and behave like an adult company'
The full Verge interview Reddit CEO Steve Huffman isn’t backing down: our full interview
397 votes -
Reddit CEO praises Elon Musk’s cost-cutting at Twitter, as protests continue to rock Reddit
105 votes -
I kind of feel bad for spez.. what would you do if you were in that position?
I have never been a leader at a big company (or anywhere...), and honestly I am pretty ignorant when it comes to money and business, so maybe that's why I feel this way but... isn't this what...
I have never been a leader at a big company (or anywhere...), and honestly I am pretty ignorant when it comes to money and business, so maybe that's why I feel this way but... isn't this what for-profit companies ultimately are supposed to do? (make money?)
Reddit is blowing up today over his internal memo, and that's when I kind of started to feel bad for him. Wouldn't an internal memo be expected at a time right now? Wouldn't it say that kind of stuff? I'm just curious but for others, if you were in his position, what would you do right now? Is there a better move to be made? What should he have said in that memo? I kind of feel bad for him. At the end of the day he helped create reddit, and it must kind of suck to watch your own project devolve and people come to hate you.
The thing about this API decision that got to me is how abrupt it was - 30 days or thereabout. That doesn't seem like very long. But aren't these decisions usually made by multiple people? (not just a CEO?) I also think it sucks that reddit app hasn't been made accessible to vision impaired folks. So maybe he sucks as a leader, but is that a reason to hate him?
I'd love to better understand.
51 votes -
Reddit CEO tells employees that subreddit blackout ‘will pass’
198 votes -
Linus Sebastian is stepping down as CEO of Linus Media Group, Creator Warehouse, and Floatplane
30 votes -
Elon Musk said Thursday that Twitter is getting a new CEO and that he will move to a product and technical role
13 votes -
Norway's $1.4tn wealth fund calls for state regulation of AI – Nicolai Tangen says fund will set guidelines for companies it invests in on ethical use of AI
4 votes -
YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki is stepping down
13 votes -
Netflix will be next on Microsoft’s shopping list
9 votes -
Amazon CEO Andy Jassy said the company does not have plans to stop selling the antisemitic film that gained notoriety recently after Brooklyn Nets guard Kyrie Irving tweeted out an Amazon link to it
8 votes