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Comment by internet2000

8 months ago

Imgur having a "community" is still the strangest part of this story.

Discovering Imgur has its own community and culture is like finding out a group of people live in your closet. You can almost imagine opening the door to grab a coat only to find a dozen people who swear this is the place they bring various outerwear and talk about such things. When you tell them they're in a coat closet, they may get upset and assure you it's more than that, now.

I was quite early on Reddit and watched Imgur grow literally from the announcement thread. It got bigger and bigger and I often used it myself.

But I remember one day being at a friend's house and she was asking me about something I'd sent her, "oh did you see that in Imgur she asked?"

"What do you mean did I see it on Imgur? I saw it in Reddit, it's just hoisted on Imgur."

And she was like, "What's Reddit? I love Imgur, I scroll on there every night."

I couldn't believe it, I went and checked and there was indeed a whole community, leaving contents and voting on things and doing all the rest, and many of them never heard of Reddit

You're right, it does feel strange, there's somehow something very uncanny about it.

It was originally a lot of Redditors, and then once (a) Reddit implemented image hosting, and (b) the 'big change' at Reddit happened a few years ago, the community grew from there.

Every for-profit business needs to earn money somehow, and if you're just "that service that reddit users use for uploading and viewing images", it's really hard to justify your existence in the first place.

And then of course, you add in VC-investments, and suddenly you have external parties forcing you to start extracting as much value from users as you possibly can.

Basically, the same story as with every other enshittificated company that happened so far.