In the wake of Reddark, a movement that saw thousands of subreddits go down in protest of monetisation around third-party apps, Reddit's r/place is now calling for reform, through the power of collaborative pixel artistry.
Often referred to as the «Pixel War», r/place is considered a pixel art haven. It's a kind of social experiment subreddit that emerges every now and then, where users can contribute to an expansive digital art board, adding a single pixel every five minutes or so depending on whether their account email is verified. Especially well-coordinated collectives often conspire, plotting intricate takeovers in certain parts of the board to get their message across.
When r/place went online this year, however, things got a little heated over the recent changes to Reddit's third-party app pricing policy. From the get-go on July 20, Reddit users and admins alike have been rampaging across the board with messages of passionate discontent.
In case you're not in the loop, the recent changes to the third-party app pricing have put admins and devs in a difficult position. With Reddit now charging developers for access to its API, and with pricing potentially reaching $1 per user, per month, many are under extreme pressure to find and sustain income streams to pay for third-party access.
That means the community’s ability to create the kind of plug-ins and features that many subreddits are built on is now severely limited, and admins from top subreddits with 40 million users and beyond are understandably miffed.
Amid lines upon lines of «Fuck Spez»—Reddit CEO Steve Huffman's username—r/place has been littered with calls for users to «Never forget what was stolen from us.»
The official day one timelapse shows some
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