this post was submitted on 09 Jul 2023
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Relaxed section for discussion and debate that doesn't fit anywhere else. Whether it's advice, how your week is going, a link that's at the back of your mind, or something like that, it can likely go here.
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I have only ever read about 20 subs on Reddit and I've never had an account there. I use Teddit to read them for stuff that hasn't made it to Lemmy yet.
just so we're all clear on one thing, generally frontends still contribute to traffic of the main platform. it's most likely that using these frontends is still contributing to reddit's traffic, even if you're not giving them any semblance of ad revenue.
if you're doing this because you don't want to contribute to the data-mine and don't want to give them ad money, this is a good tool. if you're doing this because you don't want to support reddit, there's a good chance you've been misguided there-- you'll still contribute to the numbers they show investors at the end of the year.
please correct me if im wrong
Is this an app? If so, I'm guessing it no longer works?
As others have said, it still works and works really well.
https://teddit.net/
Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from Teddit.
teddit and libreddit are alternative front ends to reddit. they work and no one knows how lmao
Probably data scraping then
doesn't look like it source
Aren't the "anonymous JSON endpoints" part of the API, though?
Not all of the API requires identification, an app key, or even OAuth, it just offers limited access without those.
reddit.com/r/news.json
reddit.com/r/news/comments/14ul3iw/suspended_twitter_account_tracking_elon_musks_jet.json
Not sure if this is what they use but you could pretty much say all endpoints are part of "the API"
Very interesting, thank you!