Edgar Cervantes / Android Authority
TL;DR
- Third-party Reddit apps are in large hassle due to an upcoming API entry change.
- According to one developer, persevering with to permit entry to an app may price upwards of $20 million every year.
- Even if apps transitioned to solely supporting paid customers, it nonetheless would seemingly be untenable.
Update, May 31, 2023 (06:13 PM ET): In the unique article under, we stated we had reached out to Reddit for some readability on this subject relating to third-party Reddit apps. We now have a response from the corporate.
A Reddit spokesperson had this to say:
We have been involved with third-party apps and builders, together with Apollo, over the course of the final six weeks following our preliminary announcement about API modifications, and our stance on third-party apps has not modified. We’re dedicated to fostering a protected and accountable developer ecosystem round Reddit — builders and third-party apps could make Reddit higher and accomplish that in a sustainable and mutually-beneficial partnership, whereas additionally holding our customers and information protected.
Expansive entry to information has influence and prices concerned, and when it comes to security and privateness now we have an obligation to our communities to be accountable stewards of knowledge.
Lastly, Reddit information for business use will want to adhere to our up to date API phrases of service and premium entry program. We’ve had a long-standing coverage in our previous phrases that outlined business and non-commercial use, however sadly a few of these agreements have been not adhered to so we clarified our phrases and reached out to choose organizations to work with them on compliance and a paid premium entry tier.
It feels like Reddit is not backing away from this transformation. Judging from this assertion and Christian Selig’s weblog submit, most third-party Reddit apps might not survive.
Original article, May 31, 2023 (04:22 PM ET): In April this 12 months, Reddit introduced some important modifications coming down the pipeline. In a weblog submit, the corporate confirmed it will start charging some builders for third-party entry to Reddit APIs. The language of the weblog submit was extremely imprecise, referencing solely “a new premium access point” for API entry for builders that “require additional capabilities, higher usage limits, and broader usage rights.” In different phrases, the extra information devs use, the extra it would price them.
Now, we even have some numbers to affiliate with this upcoming coverage change. According to Christian Selig — the lead developer of Apollo, an iOS-only third-party Reddit app — Reddit plans on charging about $12,000 per 50 million requests. This might sound cheap to non-developers, however Selig makes it clear that that is horrible information.
According to Selig, Apollo noticed a whopping seven billion API requests in April 2023. Doing the maths, he would have wanted to pay Reddit $1.7 million that month. That would equate to round $20 million every year.
Like quite a lot of third-party Reddit apps, Apollo has a paid tier. But, even with that earnings, the numbers don’t add up. “The average Apollo user uses 344 requests per day, which would cost $2.50 per month,” Selig says in a Reddit submit on the matter. That quantity “is over double what the subscription currently costs, so I’d be in the red every month,” he stated.
Of course, Selig (and different devs who run Reddit apps) may simply cost customers more cash. However, Selig thinks that the sum of money Reddit plans to cost is “not based in reality.” He goes on to do some extrapolation of how a lot cash the common Reddit consumer brings in, and comes to the conclusion that it’s about $0.12 every month.
You learn that proper: if these numbers are true, Reddit is asking for devs to pay 20x greater than what every consumer brings in income to the corporate. Obviously, Selig thinks that’s unfair.
Selig stops wanting saying that he would shut Apollo down if this coverage goes by. However, he makes it very clear that he may not afford to maintain it, which suggests Apollo would want to go darkish. It goes with out saying that if this occurs for Apollo, all however solely the very smallest third-party Reddit apps would observe go well with.
Android Authority has reached out to Reddit for an announcement on this. We will replace this text if and once we hear again.