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Reddit (/ˈrɛdɪt/ ⓘ RED-it, formerly styled reddit) is an American proprietary social news aggregation and forum social media platform. Registered users (commonly referred to as "redditors") submit content to the site such as links, text posts, images, and videos, which are then voted up or down ("upvoted" or "downvoted") by other members. Posts are organized by subject into user-created boards called "subreddits". Submissions with more upvotes appear towards the top of their subreddit and, if they receive enough upvotes, ultimately on the site's front page. Reddit administrators moderate the communities. Moderation is also conducted by subreddit-specific moderators, who are unpaid volunteers.[6] It is operated by Reddit, Inc., based in San Francisco.[7][8]
Key Information
As of February 2025, Reddit is the seventh-most-visited website in the world. According to data provided by Similarweb, 51.75% of the website traffic comes from the United States, followed by Canada at 7.01%, the United Kingdom at 6.97%, Australia at 3.97%, Germany at 3%, and the remaining 28.37% split among other countries.[7]
Reddit was founded by University of Virginia roommates Steve Huffman and Alexis Ohanian, as well as Aaron Swartz in 2005. Condé Nast Publications acquired the site in October 2006. In 2011, Reddit became an independent subsidiary of Condé Nast's parent company, Advance Publications.[9] Reddit debuted on the stock market on the morning of March 21, 2024, with the ticker symbol RDDT.[10] The current market cap as of July 2024 is US$10 billion.[11]
Reddit has been noted for its role in political activism, particularly in the United States, with notable left-wing and anti-theist subcultures on the website.[12] It has received praise for many of its features, such as the ability to create several subreddits for niche communities.[13][14] It has been criticized for the spread of misinformation and its voting system which can encourage online echo chambers.[15]
History
[edit]
Early history
[edit]The idea and initial development of Reddit originated with college roommates Steve Huffman and Alexis Ohanian in 2005, who attended a lecture by programmer-entrepreneur Paul Graham in Boston during their spring break from University of Virginia.[16][17][18] After speaking with Huffman and Ohanian following the lecture, Graham invited the two to apply to his startup incubator Y Combinator.[16] Their initial idea, My Mobile Menu, was unsuccessful,[19][20] and was intended to allow users to order food by SMS text messaging.[16][17] During a brainstorming session to pitch another startup, the idea was created for what Graham called the "front page of the Internet".[20] For that idea, Huffman and Ohanian were accepted in Y Combinator's first class.[16][17] Supported by the funding from Y Combinator,[21] Huffman coded the site in Common Lisp[22] and together with Ohanian launched Reddit in June 2005.[23][24] Embarrassed by an empty-looking site, the founders created hundreds of fake users for their posts to make it look more populated.[25]
The team expanded to include Christopher Slowe in November 2005. Between November 2005 and January 2006, Reddit merged with Aaron Swartz's company Infogami, and Swartz became an equal owner of the resulting parent company, Not A Bug.[26][27] Swartz then helped rewrite the software running Reddit using web.py, a web framework he developed. The passage from Aaron Swartz's blog post "Rewriting Reddit"[28] reveals that the switch from Lisp to Python, specifically using the web.py framework developed by Swartz, was driven by a desire for simplicity, maintainability, and performance. Despite facing skepticism and critique from the Lisp community, the change was justified by the efficiency and clarity Python provided for the project. This initiative not only influenced the technical evolution of Reddit but also contributed to the broader web development community by inspiring other frameworks and remaining a significant part of Reddit's history.[28] (In 2020, Ohanian claimed that rather than Swartz being a co-founder, the correct description would be that Swartz's company was acquired by Reddit 6 months after he and Huffman had started.)[29]
Huffman and Ohanian sold Reddit to Condé Nast Publications, owner of Wired, on October 31, 2006, for a reported $10 million to $20 million[16][30] and the team moved to San Francisco.[30] In November 2006, Swartz blogged complaining about the new corporate environment, criticizing its level of productivity.[31] In January 2007, Swartz was fired for undisclosed reasons.[32]
Huffman and Ohanian left Reddit in 2009.[33] Huffman went on to co-found Hipmunk with Adam Goldstein, and later recruited Ohanian[34] and Slowe to the new company.[35] After Huffman and Ohanian left Reddit, Erik Martin, who joined the company as a community manager in 2008 and later became general manager in 2011, played a role in Reddit's growth.[36] VentureBeat noted that Martin was "responsible for keeping the site going" under Condé Nast's ownership.[37]
Yishan Wong joined Reddit as CEO in 2012.[38] Wong resigned from Reddit in 2014, citing disagreements about his proposal to move the company's offices from San Francisco to nearby Daly City, but also the "stressful and draining" nature of the position.[39][40] Ohanian credited Wong with the company's newfound success as its user base grew from 35 million to 174 million.[40] Wong oversaw the company as it raised $50 million in funding and spun off as an independent company.[41] Also during this time, Reddit began accepting the digital currency Bitcoin for its Reddit Gold subscription service through a partnership with bitcoin payment processor Coinbase in February 2013.[42] Ellen Pao replaced Wong as interim CEO in 2014 and resigned in 2015 amid a user revolt over the firing of a popular Reddit employee.[43] During her tenure, Reddit initiated an anti-harassment policy,[44] banned involuntary sexualization, and banned several forums that focused on bigoted content or harassment of individuals.[45]
Ohanian and Huffman return
[edit]After five years away from the company, Ohanian and Huffman returned to leadership roles: Ohanian became the full-time executive chairman in November 2014 following Wong's resignation, while Pao's departure on July 10, 2015, led to Huffman's return as the company's chief executive.[46][47] After Huffman rejoined Reddit as CEO, he launched Reddit's iOS and Android apps, improved Reddit's mobile website, and created A/B testing infrastructure.[16] The company launched a major redesign of its website in April 2018.[48] Huffman said new users were turned off from Reddit because it had looked like a "dystopian Craigslist".[48] Reddit also instituted several technological improvements,[49] such as a new tool that allows users to hide posts, comments, and private messages from selected redditors in an attempt to curb online harassment,[50] and new content guidelines. These new content guidelines were aimed at banning content inciting violence and quarantining offensive material.[16][49] Slowe, the company's first employee, rejoined Reddit in 2017 as chief technology officer.[51]
Ohanian resigned as a member of the board on June 5, 2020 in response to the George Floyd protests and requested to be replaced "by a Black candidate".[52] Michael Seibel, then-CEO of Y Combinator, was subsequently named to the board.[53] On March 5, 2021, Reddit announced that it had appointed Drew Vollero, who had worked at Snapchat's parent company, Snap Inc., as its first chief financial officer (CFO) weeks after the site was thrust into the spotlight due to its role in the GameStop trading frenzy. Vollero's appointment spurred speculation of an initial public offering, a move that senior leaders have considered publicly.[54]
IPO
[edit]As of August 2021[update], Reddit is valued at more than $10 billion following a $410 million funding round.[55] The company was looking to hire investment bankers and lawyers to assist in making an initial public offering. However, CEO Steve Huffman said the company has not decided on the timing for when to go public.[56] In December 2021, Reddit revealed that it had confidentially filed for an initial public offering with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.[57][58][59] Reddit's initial public offering opened on March 20, 2024, at $34 per share and a $6.4 billion valuation.[60] They went public the next day on the New York Stock Exchange at $47 per share and rose to $50.44 at market close on their first day of trading, reaching a market cap of $9.5 billion.[61] The current market cap as of July 2024 is $10 billion.[11]
Site overview
[edit]Reddit is a website comprising user-generated content—including photos, videos, links, and text-based posts—and discussions of this content in what is essentially a bulletin board system.[62][63] The name "Reddit" is a play-on-words with the phrase "read it", i.e., "I read it on Reddit."[64][65] According to Reddit, in 2019, there were approximately 430 million monthly users,[66] who are known as "redditors".[48] The site's content is divided into categories or communities known on-site as "subreddits", of which there are more than 138,000 active communities.[67]
As a network of communities, Reddit's core content consists of posts from its users.[62][63] Users can comment on others' posts to continue the conversation.[62] A key feature to Reddit is that users can cast positive or negative votes, called upvotes and downvotes respectively, for each post and comment on the site.[62] The number of upvotes or downvotes determines the posts' visibility on the site, so the most popular content is displayed to the most people.[62] Users can also earn "karma" for their posts and comments, a status that reflects their standing within the community and their contributions to Reddit.[62] Posts are sometimes automatically archived after six months, meaning they can no longer be commented or voted on.[68]
The most popular posts from the site's numerous subreddits are visible on the front page to those who browse the site without an account.[67][69] By default for those users, the front page will display the subreddit r/popular, featuring top-ranked posts across all of Reddit, excluding not-safe-for-work communities and others that are most commonly filtered out by users (even if they are safe for work).[70][71] The subreddit r/all originally did not filter topics,[72] but as of 2021 it does not include not-safe-for-work content.[73] Registered users who subscribe to subreddits see the top content from the subreddits to which they subscribe on their personal front pages.[67][69] Additionally, some subreddits have a karma and account age requirement to discourage bots and spammers from posting.
Front-page rank—for both the general front page and for individual subreddits—is determined by a combination of factors, including the age of the submission, positive ("upvoted") to negative ("downvoted") feedback ratio, and the total vote-count.[74]
Users and moderators
[edit]Registering an account with Reddit is free and requires an email address. In addition to commenting and voting, registered users can also create their own subreddit on a topic of their choosing.[75] In Reddit style, usernames begin with "u/". Noteworthy redditors include u/Poem_for_your_sprog, who responds to messages across Reddit in verse,[76] u/Shitty_Watercolour who posts paintings in response to posts,[77] and u/spez, the CEO of Reddit (Steve Huffman).
Subreddits are overseen by moderators, Reddit users who earn the title by creating a subreddit or being promoted by a current moderator.[67] Reddit users may also request to moderate a sub that has no moderators or very inactive ones in r/redditrequest. These requests are reviewed by the Reddit admins. Moderators are volunteers who manage their communities, set and enforce community-specific rules, remove posts and comments that violate these rules, and often work to keep discussions in their subreddit on topic.[67][14][78] Admins, by contrast, are employees of Reddit.[14]
Early on, Reddit implemented shadow banning, purportedly to address spam accounts, while saying, "it's still the only tool we have to punish people who break the rules".[79][80] In 2015, Reddit added an account suspension feature which they said would replace sitewide shadowbans, however, moderators are still able to shadowban users or their individual posts.[81]
Reddit releases transparency reports annually which have information like how many posts have been taken down by moderators and for what reason. It also details information about requests law enforcement agencies have made for information about users or to take down content.[82] In 2020, Reddit removed 6% of posts made on the platform (approx. 233 million). More than 99% of removals were marked as spam; the remainder made up of a mix of other offensive content. Around 131 million posts were removed by the automated moderator and the rest were taken down manually.[83][84]
It is estimated that Reddit's moderators work 466 hours every day, which is $3.4 million in unpaid work each year.[85] That roughly equates to 2.8% of the company's annual revenue.[85]
Subreddits
[edit]Subreddits (officially called communities) are user-created areas of interest where discussions on Reddit are organized. There are about 138,000 active subreddits (among a total of 1.2 million) as of July 2018[update].[86][87] Subreddit names begin with "r/"; for instance, "r/science" is a community devoted to discussing scientific publications, while "r/gaming" is a community devoted to discussing video games, and "r/worldnews" is for posting news articles from around the world.
In a 2014 interview with Memeburn, Erik Martin, then the general manager of Reddit, remarked that their "approach is to give the community moderators or curators as much control as possible so that they can shape and cultivate the type of communities they want".[88] Subreddits often use themed variants of Reddit's alien mascot, Snoo, in the visual styling of their communities.[89]
Other features
[edit]Reddit Premium (formerly Reddit Gold) is a premium membership that allows users to view the site ad-free.[90] Until 2023, subscribers could also use coins to award posts or comments they valued, generally due to humorous or high-quality content.[91] Reddit Premium unlocks several features not accessible to regular users, such as comment highlighting, exclusive subreddits such as r/lounge, a personalized Snoo (known as a "snoovatar"), and a Reddit premium trophy that can be displayed on the user's profile.[92][93] Reddit Gold was renamed to Reddit Premium in 2018. In addition to gold coins, users were able to gift silver and platinum coins to other users as rewards for quality content.[94]
On the site, redditors commemorate their "cake day" once a year, on the anniversary of the day their account was created.[95] Cake day adds an icon of a small slice of cake next to the user's name for 24 hours.[96] In August 2021, the company introduced a TikTok-like short-form video feature for iOS that lets users rapidly swipe through a feed of short video content.[97] In December 2021, the company introduced a Spotify Wrapped-like feature called Reddit Recap that recaps various statistics from January 1 to November 30 about each individual user, such as how much time they spent on Reddit, which communities they joined, and the topics that they engaged with, and allows the user to view it.[98]
On July 7, 2022, Reddit announced "blockchain-backed Collectible Avatars", customizable avatars which are available on the subreddit r/CollectibleAvatars for purchase separate from Reddit Premium. The avatars were created by independent artists who post work on other subreddits, and who receive a portion of the profits. They use Reddit's Polygon blockchain-powered digital wallet the Vault.[99] Richard Lawler of The Verge described them as "non-fungible tokens (NFTs) that are available for purchase in the Reddit Avatar Builder".[100]
Chat features
[edit]In 2017, Reddit developed its own real-time chat software for the site.[101] While some established subreddits have used third-party software to chat about their communities, the company built chat functions that it hopes will become an integral part of Reddit.[101] Individual chat rooms were rolled out in 2017 and community chat rooms for members of a given subreddit were rolled out in 2018.[101][102][103]
Reddit Talk was announced in April 2021 as a competitor to Clubhouse. Reddit Talk lets subreddit moderators start audio meeting rooms that mimic Clubhouse in design.[104] In 2022, Reddit Talk was updated to support recording audio rooms and work on the web version of Reddit. A desktop app is reportedly slated for a late February release.[105]
Reddit Chat replaced the Reddit private messaging system in June 2025.
AI integration
[edit]Reddit acquired MeaningCloud, a natural language processing company in June 2022.[106][107] In February 2024, Reddit announced a partnership with Google in a deal worth about $60 million per year, to license its real-time user content to train Google's AI model. The partnership also lets Reddit get access to Google's "Vertex AI" service which would help improve search results on Reddit.[108][109] It was announced that Reddit and OpenAI had reached a deal that will allow OpenAI access to the Reddit API to train its models, while Reddit will receive certain AI tools for moderators and users.[110] In December 2024, Reddit announced Reddit Answers, an AI search tool that summarizes conversations in response to a question from the user.[111]
Technology and design
[edit]Hosting and servers
[edit]Reddit's search function has had many iterations; the one on the new site currently uses Lucidworks Fusion, while the search on old reddit uses Reddit's own in-house search[112]
Mobile apps
[edit]In 2009, Reddit released their official mobile app, called iReddit.[113] This app was sparsely updated, and was superseded by a new mobile webite in 2010.[114] For several years, most Redditors relied on third-party apps to access Reddit on mobile devices. In October 2014, Reddit acquired one of them, Alien Blue, which became the official iOS Reddit app.[115] Reddit removed Alien Blue and released its official application, Reddit: The Official App, on Google Play and the iOS App Store in April 2016.[116] The company released an app for Reddit's question-and-answer Ask Me Anything subreddit in 2014.[117] The app allowed users to see active Ask Me Anythings, receive notifications, ask questions and vote.[117]
As of September 2025, all versions of the iReddit and Alien Blue apps still work on older versions of iOS; they were not affected by the API shutdown due to both of them being official Reddit apps. The 2010 mobile site, however, was shut down in 2024.
Product and design changes
[edit]
The site has undergone several products and design changes since it originally launched in 2005. When it initially launched, there were no comments or subreddits. Comments were added in 2005[48][118] and interest-based groups (called 'subreddits') were introduced in 2008.[119] Allowing users to create subreddits has led to much of the activity that redditors would recognize that helped define Reddit. These include subreddits "WTF", "funny", and "AskReddit".[119] Reddit rolled out its multireddit feature, the site's biggest change to its front page in years, in 2013.[120] With the multireddits, users see top stories from a collection of subreddits.[120]
In 2015, Reddit enabled embedding and as a result users could share Reddit content on other sites.[121] In 2016, Reddit began hosting images using a new image uploading tool, a move that shifted away from the uploading service Imgur that had been the de facto service.[122] Users still can upload images to Reddit using Imgur.[122] Reddit's in-house video uploading service for desktop and mobile launched in 2017.[123] Previously, users had to use third-party video uploading services, which Reddit acknowledged was time-consuming for users.[123]
Reddit released its "spoiler tags" feature in January 2017.[124] The feature warns users of potential spoilers in posts and pixelates preview images.[124] Reddit unveiled changes to its public front page, called r/popular, in 2017;[72] the change creates a front page free of potentially adult-oriented content for unregistered users.[72] In late 2017, Reddit declared it wanted to be a mobile-first site, launching several changes to its apps for iOS and Android.[95] The new features included user-to-user chat, a theater mode for viewing visual content, and mobile tools for the site's moderators. "Mod mode" lets moderators manage content and their subreddits on mobile devices.[95]
Reddit launched its redesigned website in 2018, with its first major visual update in a decade.[48] Development for the new site took more than a year.[48] It was the result of an initiative by Huffman upon returning to Reddit, who said the site's outdated look deterred new users.[48] The new site features a hamburger menu to help users navigate the site, different views, and new fonts to better inform redditors if they are clicking on a Reddit post or an external link.[48] The nominal goal was not only for Reddit to improve its appearance, but also to make it easier to accommodate a new generation of Reddit users.[48] Additionally Reddit's growth had strained the site's back end;[125] Huffman and Reddit Vice President of Engineering Nick Caldwell told The Wall Street Journal's COI Journal that Reddit needed to leverage artificial intelligence and other modern digital tools.[125] Users can opt-out of the redesign by using the old.reddit.com domain.[126] On May 15, 2024, the dedicated login flow was removed from the old domain, although site admins said they had "no plans" to remove the old domain entirely.[127] In November 2023, Fast Company reported that Reddit began rolling out a comprehensive rebrand, including a new logo, typeface, brand colors, and an updated version of its mascot Snoo, as part of its preparation for a potential 2024 IPO and in response to its expanding user base and global reach.[128]
Logo
[edit]

Reddit's logo consists of a time-traveling alien named Snoo and the company name stylized as "reddit". The alien has an oval head, pom-pom ears, and an antenna.[129] Its colors are black, white, and orange-red.[129] The mascot was created in 2005 while company co-founder Alexis Ohanian was an undergraduate at the University of Virginia.[130] Ohanian drew a doodle of the creature while he was bored during a marketing class.[89] Originally, Ohanian sought to name the mascot S'new, a play on "What's new?", to tie the mascot into Reddit's premise as the "front page of the Internet".[129][89] Eventually, the name Snoo was chosen.[129] In 2011, Ohanian outlined the logo's evolution with a graphic that showcased several early versions, including various spellings of the website name, such as "Reditt".[130]
Snoo is genderless, so the logo is moldable.[129][131] Over the years, the Reddit logo has frequently changed for holidays and other special events.[130] Many subreddits have a customized Snoo logo to represent the subreddit.[89] Redditors can also submit their own logos, which sometimes appear on the site's front page, or create their own customized versions of Snoo for their communities (or "subreddits").[130][48] When Reddit revamped its website in April 2018, the company imposed several restrictions on how Snoo can be designed: Snoo's head "should always appear blank or neutral", Snoo's eyes are orange-red, and Snoo cannot have fingers.[129] Snoo's purpose is to discover and explore humanity.[129]
Discontinued features
[edit]Starting in 2023 with the discontinuation of the Reddit API's free tier, Reddit has been silently discontinuing legacy features and reducing the functionalities of the old site. All of these changes have been met with significant backlash by the Reddit community.
Private messages
[edit]Reddit's private messaging system, which had been present on the site ever since its launch in 2005, was discontinued in 2025 in favor of Reddit Chat.[132]
Free API tier
[edit]Reddit discontinued its free API tier for commercial applications in April 2023.[133] This was met with significant backlash by the community, leaving the website in a state of disarray for months.
Legacy mobile site (i.reddit)
[edit]In early 2023, Reddit silently discontinued[134] its legacy mobile site, known as i.reddit, and reddit compact and previously accessible at i.reddit.com. This was despite a Reddit admin stating that iReddit was "here to stay".
Original redesign (new.reddit)
[edit]The original 2017 redesign of Reddit, also known as new.reddit and old new Reddit and previously accessible at new.reddit.com, was discontinued[135] on December 11, 2024. No changes were made to the pre-2017 legacy desktop site, still accessible at old.reddit.com.
Classic coins and awards
[edit]In 2023, the Reddit coin and award system was discontinued[136] in favor of a "golden upvote". This was deeply unpopular, and Reddit added awards back under a new implementation a few months later.[137] However, these new awards are not accessible or viewable on the legacy desktop site.
Custom emoji
[edit]On June 4th, 2025, Reddit announced that they would be removing custom emoji from comments.
Features migrated from the legacy desktop site (old.reddit)
[edit]Login: Login functionality was removed from the old site sometime in 2024. You can still log in to the old site, but you must do it through the new site.
Age trophies: Account age trophies past Year 15 are not visible on the old site.
Private messaging: Sending a private message (like a modmail) now requires you to use the new site.
FAQ, terms, and official Wiki pages: All official information pages were migrated from the legacy site's wiki to the new site sometime in 2020.
Reddit notifications: Official Reddit notifications were moved from the legacy inbox to the Notifications section, which is only accessible on the new site.
RPAN
[edit]The Reddit Public Access Network, commonly known as RPAN, was a live streaming service run by Reddit.[138] Viewers interacted with streams by upvoting or downvoting, chatting, and giving paid awards. During the off-air hours, 24/7 streaming was possible to the dedicated subreddits, but with limited slots and capabilities.[138] On August 19, 2019, Reddit announced RPAN. It was said to be in testing, but they were experimenting with making it a permanent program, as well as a way to increase revenue for the platform.[139] Later, a five-day testing period began. During the testing period, streaming was for a select group of users, allowing 30 minutes of streaming per person and 100 slots.[140] On July 1, 2020, RPAN Studio was released, an application that allows users to broadcast live from desktop computers. RPAN Studio has been built on top of OBS, an open-source streaming and recording program.[141] On January 28, 2021, Reddit permanently increased streaming times to three hours.[142] RPAN was officially discontinued on November 15, 2022.[143]
Corporate affairs
[edit]
Reddit is a public company based in San Francisco.[144][86] In 2023, it downsized from an office in the Mid-Market neighborhood[145] to an office in the South of Market neighborhood.[146] Reddit doubled its headcount in 2017;[147] as of 2018[update], it employed approximately 350 people.[86] In 2017, the company was valued at $1.8 billion during a $200 million round of new venture funding.[148][41] The company was previously owned by Condé Nast, but was spun off as an independent company.[41] As of April 2018[update], Advance Publications, Condé Nast's parent company, retained a majority stake in Reddit.[86]
Reddit's key management personnel includes co-founder and CEO Steve Huffman,[16] Chief Technology Officer Chris Slowe, who was the company's original lead engineer,[51] and Chief Operating Officer Jen Wong, a former president of digital and chief operating officer at Time Inc.[90] Reddit does not disclose its revenue figures.[148][90] The company generates revenue in part through advertising and premium memberships that remove ads from the site.[90] As part of its company culture, Reddit operates on a no-negotiation policy for employee salaries.[149] The company offers new mothers, fathers, and adoptive parents up to 16 weeks of parental leave.[150]
Advertising
[edit]Reddit launched two different ways of advertising on the site in 2009. The company launched sponsored content[151] and a self-serve ads platform that year.[41][152] Reddit launched its Reddit Gold benefits program in July 2010, which offered new features to editors and created a new revenue stream for the business that did not rely on banner ads.[153] On September 6, 2011, Reddit became operationally independent of Condé Nast, operating as a separate subsidiary of its parent company, Advance Publications.[154]
Reddit's users tend to be more privacy-conscious than on other websites, often using tools like ad-blocking software and proxies,[155] and they dislike "feeling manipulated by brands" but respond well to "content that begs for intelligent viewers and participants."[156] Lauren Orsini writes in ReadWrite that "Reddit's huge community is the perfect hype machine for promoting a new movie, a product release, or a lagging political campaign" but there is a "very specific set of etiquette. Redditors don't want to advertise for you, they want to talk to you."[157] Journalists have used the site as a basis for stories, though they are advised by the site's policies to respect that "reddit's communities belong to their members" and to seek proper attribution for people's contributions.[158]
Reddit announced that they would begin using VigLink to redirect affiliate links in June 2016.[159][160] Since 2017, Reddit has partnered with companies to host sponsored AMAs and other interactive events,[161][162] increased advertising offerings,[163] and introduced efforts to work with content publishers.[164]
In 2018, Reddit hired Jen Wong as COO, responsible for the company's business strategy and growth, and introduced native mobile ads.[90] Reddit opened a Chicago office to be closer to major companies and advertising agencies located in and around Chicago.[86] In 2019, Reddit hired former Twitter ad director Shariq Rizvi as its vice president of ad products and engineering.[165]
Community and culture
[edit]The website is known for its open nature and diverse user community that generate its content.[13] Its demographics allows for wide-ranging subject areas, as well as the ability for smaller subreddits to serve more niche purposes.[14] The user base of Reddit has given birth to other websites, including image sharing community and image host Imgur, which started in 2009 as a gift to Reddit's community.[166] In its first five months, it jumped from a thousand hits per day to a million total page views.[167] Data collected by Pew Research Center in 2013 found that Reddit users were much more likely to be from urban communities than rural ones.[168] Women were greatly under-represented on the website.[168] Reddit's userbase had a disproportionately high number of Hispanic users.[168] With regards to education, high school dropouts were over-represented among Reddit users.[168]
Reddit has been noted for its role in political activism, with notable left-wing and anti-theist subcultures on the website.[12] Statistics from Google Ad Planner suggest that 74% of Reddit users are male.[169] In 2016, the Pew Research Center published research showing that 4% of U.S. adults use Reddit, of which 67% are men, while 78% of users get news from Reddit.[170] Users tend to be significantly younger than average with less than 1% of users being 65 or over.[170] Politically, 43% of Reddit users surveyed by Pew Research Center in 2016 identified as liberal, with 38% identifying as moderate and 19% as conservative.[171]
Reddit is known in part for its passionate user base,[86] which has been described as "offbeat, quirky, and anti-establishment".[144] Similar to the "Slashdot effect", the Reddit effect occurs when a smaller website crashes due to a high influx of traffic after being linked to on Reddit; this is also called the Reddit "hug of death".[172][173]
Activism
[edit]Users have used Reddit as a platform for their charitable and philanthropic efforts.[174] Redditors raised more than $100,000 for charity in support of comedians Jon Stewart's and Stephen Colbert's Rally to Restore Sanity and/or Fear; more than $180,000 for Haiti earthquake relief efforts; and delivered food pantries' Amazon wish lists.[175][174][176] In 2010, Christians, Muslims, and atheists held a friendly fundraising competition, where the groups raised more than $50,000.[177] A similar donation drive in 2011 saw the atheism subreddit raise over $200,000 for charity.[178] In February 2014, Reddit announced it would donate 10% of its annual ad revenue to non-profits voted upon by its users.[179] As a result of the campaign, Reddit donated $82,765 each to each of the selected recipients.[180]
Reddit has been used for a wide variety of political engagement including the presidential campaigns of Barack Obama,[181][182] Donald Trump,[183] Hillary Clinton,[184] and Bernie Sanders.[185] It has also been used for self-organizing sociopolitical activism such as protests, communication with politicians and active communities. Reddit has become a popular place for worldwide political discussions.[186]
March for Science
[edit]The March for Science originated from a discussion on Reddit over the deletion of all references to climate change from the White House website, about which a user commented that "There needs to be a Scientists' March on Washington".[187][188][189] On April 22, 2017, more than 1 million scientists and supporters participated in more than 600 events in 66 countries across the globe.[190]
Internet privacy, neutrality and anonymity
[edit]Reddit users have been engaged in the defense of Internet privacy, net neutrality and Internet anonymity.
Reddit created an Internet blackout day and was joined by Wikipedia and other sites in 2012 in protest of the Stop Online Piracy and PROTECT IP acts.[191][192] On January 18, Reddit participated in a 12-hour sitewide blackout to coincide with a congressional committee hearing on the measures.[192][193] During that time, Reddit displayed a message on the legislation's effects on Reddit, in addition to resources on the proposed laws.[193] In May 2012, Reddit joined the Internet Defense League, a group formed to organize future protests.[194]
The site and its users protested the Federal Communications Commission as it prepared to scrap net neutrality rules.[195] In 2017, users upvoted "Battle for the Net" posts enough times that they filled up the entire front page.[195] On another day, the front page was overtaken by posts showcasing campaign donations received by members of Congress from the telecommunications industry.[195] Reddit CEO Steve Huffman has also advocated for net neutrality rules.[196][197] In 2017, Huffman told The New York Times that without net neutrality protections, "you give internet service providers the ability to choose winners and losers".[196] On Reddit, Huffman urged redditors to express support for net neutrality and contact their elected representatives in Washington, D.C.[197] Huffman said that the repeal of net neutrality rules stifles competition. He said he and Reddit would continue to advocate for net neutrality.[198]
"Restoring Truthiness" campaign
[edit]As a response to Glenn Beck's August 28, 2010, Restoring Honor rally, in September 2010 Reddit users started a movement to persuade satirist Stephen Colbert to have a counter-rally in Washington, D.C.[175] The movement, which came to be called "Restoring Truthiness", was started by user mrsammercer, in a post where he described waking up from a dream in which Stephen Colbert was holding a satirical rally in D.C.[199] Over $100,000 was raised for charity to gain the attention of Colbert.[175] The campaign was mentioned on-air several times, and when the Rally to Restore Sanity and/or Fear was held in Washington, D.C., on October 30, 2010, thousands of redditors made the journey.[200]
During a post-rally press conference, Reddit co-founder Ohanian asked, "What role did the Internet campaign play in convincing you to hold this rally?" Jon Stewart responded by saying that, though it was a very nice gesture, he and Colbert had already thought of the idea and the deposit for using the National Mall was already paid during the summer, so it acted mostly as a "validation of what we were thinking about attempting".[201] In a message to the Reddit community, Colbert later added, "I have no doubt that your efforts to organize and the joy you clearly brought to your part of the story contributed greatly to the turnout and success."[202]
Censorship of Reddit
[edit]Reddit has been blocked in multiple countries due to Internet censorship performed by the governments of some countries. As of October 2023, Reddit is blocked in Indonesia, China, North Korea, Turkey, and partially blocked in Bangladesh. Reddit was blocked in Russia in 2015 and later unblocked.
Since May 2014, Reddit has been blocked in Indonesia by the Ministry of Communication and Information Technology for hosting content containing nudity.[203][204]
In August 2015, the Federal Drug Control Service of Russia determined that Reddit was promoting conversations about psychedelic drugs. The Roskomnadzor banned the website, citing advice on how to grow magic mushrooms as the reason. The Russian government had asked Reddit before to remove drug-related posts to no response. The site was later unblocked.[205][206]
ISPs in India were found to be blocking traffic over Reddit for intermittent periods in some regions in 2019.[207]
In July 2025, Reddit began requiring age verification in order to access certain features, to comply with the UK's Online Safety Act 2023, using a service called Persona.[208] Content covered includes sexually explicit material, encouragement of suicide and eating disorders, and expressions of hatred based on race, religion, or sexual orientation.[209]
Community traditions
[edit]April Fools' Day
[edit]Over the years, Reddit has done multiple pranks and events for April Fools' Day. Since 2013, they have often taken the form of massive social experiments. Noteworthy events include The Button in 2015, which included a global "button" that could only be clicked once per user. It attracted more than a million clicks.[210]
2017's experiment r/place involved making a collaborative pixel art. Millions of users worked together in communities to place pixels one at a time to create a larger canvas. This experiment was very successful and repeated in 2022's April Fools experiment and in 2023.[211][212]
AMAs ("Ask Me Anything")
[edit]AMAs, or "Ask Me Anything" interviews, during an AMA on r/IAmA and other subreddits, users can ask questions to interviewees.[213] Notable participants include former-United States President Barack Obama (while campaigning for the 2012 election),[214] Bill Gates (multiple times),[215] and Donald Trump (also while campaigning).[216] AMAs have featured CEO Steve Huffman,[217] as well as figures from entertainment industries around the world (including Priyanka Chopra and George Clooney),[218][219] literature (Margaret Atwood),[220] space (Buzz Aldrin),[221] privacy (Edward Snowden),[222] fictional characters (including Borat and Cookie Monster) and others, such as experts who answered questions about the transgender community.[223] The Atlantic wrote that an AMA "imports the aspirational norms of honesty and authenticity from pseudonymous Internet forums into a public venue".[13]
RedditGifts
[edit]RedditGifts was a program that offers gift exchanges throughout the year.[224] The fan-made RedditGifts site was created in 2009 for a Secret Santa exchange among Reddit users, which has since become the world's largest[225] and set a Guinness World record.[131] In 2009, 4,500 redditors participated.[225] For the 2010 holiday season, 92 countries were involved in the secret Santa program. There were 17,543 participants, and $662,907.60 was collectively spent on gift purchases and shipping costs.[226][227][228] In 2014, about 200,000 users from 188 countries participated.[229] Several celebrities have participated in the program, including Bill Gates,[230] Alyssa Milano,[231] and Snoop Dogg.[232] Eventually, the secret Santa program expanded to various other occasions through RedditGifts, which Reddit acquired in 2011.[225]
Brigading
[edit]As with most public online forums, Reddit is vulnerable to the use of disruptive or manipulative practices by its members, from sources such as troll farms, click farms and astroturfing.
Another example is brigading, notable in the case of Reddit as it is often cited as the origin of the practice and use of the word in this context.[233][234] Though all of these examples are in some form, against the rules of Reddit's content policy,[235] at least in the case of brigading, they are not always malicious in intent. A notable example is the case of "Mr. Splashy Pants", when organized brigading of another website, by redditors, appears to have been tacitly encouraged by the Reddit administration. In the aftermath, the target of this vote brigading appeared to take it in good humor.[236]
Mister Splashy Pants
[edit]
Reddit communities occasionally coordinate Reddit-external projects such as skewing polls on other websites, like the 2007 incident when Greenpeace allowed web users to decide the name of a humpback whale it was tracking. Reddit users voted en masse to name the whale "Mister Splashy Pants", and Reddit administrators encouraged the prank by changing the site logo to a whale during the voting. In December of that year, Mister Splashy Pants was announced as the winner of the competition.[237][238]
Criticism and controversies
[edit]In general, the website grants subreddit moderators discretion in deciding what content is and is not allowed on their subreddits, so long as site-wide rules are not being violated. This relative freedom has allowed for a wide diversity of subreddits to exist, and some of them have attracted controversy.[239]

Many of the default subreddits are highly moderated, with the "science" subreddit banning climate change denialism,[240] and the "news" subreddit banning opinion pieces and columns.[241] Reddit has changed its site-wide editorial policies several times, sometimes in reaction to controversies.[242][243][244][245] Reddit has historically been a platform for objectionable but legal content, and in 2011, news media covered the way that jailbait was being shared on the site before the site changed their policies to explicitly ban "suggestive or sexual content featuring minors".[246] Reddit also received controversy over hosting misogynistic content, including the doxing of erotic models and revenge porn.[247] Following some controversial incidents of Internet vigilantism, Reddit introduced a strict rule against the online publication of non-public personally-identifying information (a common internet harassment tool colloquially known as doxxing) via the site. Those who break the rule are subject to a site-wide ban, which can result in the deletion of their user-generated content.
Due to Reddit's decentralized moderation, user anonymity, and lack of fact-checking systems, the platform is highly prone to spreading misinformation and disinformation.[248] It has been suggested that those who use Reddit should exercise caution in taking user-created unsourced content as fact.[249] Concerns have been raised in particular about dangerous medical misinformation on the platform.[15][250] A 2022 study of 300 comments and posts discussing urinary tract infections found that fewer than 1% cited a source for their content, and several contained harmful medical misinformation that may dissuade readers from seeking medical care or lead to dangerous self-medication, such as proposing fasting as a cure for UTIs.[250]
Reddit communities exhibit the echo chamber effect, in which repeated unsourced statements come to be accepted among the community as fact, leading to distorted worldviews among users.[251] It has been suggested that since 2019, Russian state-sponsored troll accounts and bots have engaged in a broad campaign to take over subreddits, such as r/antiwar.[252]
2013 Boston bombing suspect misidentifications
[edit]After the Boston Marathon bombing in April 2013, Reddit faced criticism after users wrongly identified a number of people as suspects in the subreddit r/FindBostonBombers.[253] Notable among misidentified bombing suspects was Sunil Tripathi, a student reported missing before the bombings took place. A body reported to be Sunil's was found in Providence River in Rhode Island on April 25, according to Rhode Island Health Department. The cause of death was not immediately known, but authorities said they did not suspect foul play.[254] The family later confirmed Tripathi's death was a result of suicide.[255] Reddit general manager Erik Martin later issued an apology for this behavior, criticizing the "online witch hunts and dangerous speculation" that took place on the website.[256] The incident was later referenced in the season 5 episode of the CBS TV series The Good Wife titled "Whack-a-Mole",[257] as well as The Newsroom.[258][259]
2014 celebrity photo hacks
[edit]In August, private sexual photos from the celebrity photo hack were widely disseminated across the site.[260][261] A dedicated subreddit, "TheFappening", was created for this purpose,[262] and contained links to most if not all of the criminally obtained explicit images.[263][264][265][266] Some images of McKayla Maroney and Liz Lee were identified by redditors and outside commentators as child pornography because the photos were taken when the women were underage.[267] The subreddit was banned on September 6.[268] The scandal led to wider criticisms concerning the website's administration from The Verge and The Daily Dot.[269][270]
2015 CEO change and subreddit bannings
[edit]After Ellen Pao became CEO in 2014, she was initially a target of criticism by users who objected to the deletion of content critical of herself and her husband.[271] Later on June 10, 2015, Reddit shut down the 150,000-subscriber "fatpeoplehate" subreddit and four others citing issues related to harassment.[272] This move was seen as very controversial; some commenters said that the bans went too far, while others said that the bans did not go far enough.[273] One of the latter complaints concerned a subreddit that was "expressing support" for the perpetrator of the Charleston church shooting.[274] Responding to the accusations of "skewed enforcement", Reddit reaffirmed their commitment to free expression and stated, "There are some subreddits with very little viewership that get highlighted repeatedly for their content, but those are a tiny fraction of the content on the site."
On July 2, Reddit began experiencing a series of blackouts as moderators set popular subreddit communities to private, in an event dubbed "AMAgeddon", a portmanteau of AMA ("ask me anything") and Armageddon. This was done in protest of the recent firing of Victoria Taylor, an administrator who helped organize citizen-led interviews with famous people on the popular AMA subreddit. Organizers of the blackout also expressed resentment about the recent severance of the communication between Reddit and the moderators of subreddits.[275] The blackout intensified on July 3 when former community manager David Croach gave an AMA about being fired. Before deleting his posts, he stated that Ellen Pao dismissed him with one year of health coverage when he had cancer and did not recover quickly enough.[276][277] Following this, a Change.org petition to remove Pao as CEO of Reddit Inc. reached over 200,000 signatures.[278][279][280] Pao posted a response on July 3 as well as an extended version of it on July 6 in which she apologized for bad communication and not delivering on promises. She also apologized on behalf of the other administrators and noted that problems already existed over the past several years.[281][282][283][284] On July 10, Pao resigned as CEO and was replaced by former CEO and co-founder Steve Huffman.[285]
In August, Steve Huffman introduced a policy which led to the banning of several offensive and sexual communities. Included in the ban was lolicon, to which Huffman referred as "animated CP [child porn]".[286] Some subreddits had also been "quarantined" due to having "highly-offensive or upsetting content" such as r/European, r/swedenyes, r/drawpeople, r/kiketown, r/blackfathers, r/greatapes, and r/whitesarecriminals.[287]
2023 API changes
[edit]
In April 2023, Reddit announced its intentions to charge large fees for its application programming interface (API), a feature of the site that has existed for free since 2008,[288] causing an ongoing dispute. The move forced multiple third-party applications to shut down and threatened accessibility applications and moderation tools.[289] On May 31, Apollo developer Christian Selig stated that Reddit's pricing would force him to cease development on the app. The resulting outcry from the Reddit community ultimately led to a planned protest from June 12 to 14 in which moderators for the site would make their communities private or restricted posting.[290] Following the release of an internal memo from Reddit CEO Steve Huffman and defiance from Reddit, some moderators have continued their protest.[291] Alternate forms of protest have emerged in the days following the initial blackout. Upon reopening, users of r/pics, r/gifs, and r/aww voted to exclusively post about comedian John Oliver.[292] Multiple subreddits labeled themselves as not safe for work (NSFW), affecting advertisements and resulting in administrators removing the entire moderation team of some subreddits.[293] The protest has been compared to a strike.[294]
/r/place had its third launch on July 20, 2023; however, the launch was heavily protested by users and developers due to the event following the 2023 Reddit API controversy; Reddit CEO Steve Huffman's decision to make it prohibitively expensive for third-party app developers drew widespread condemnation.[295][296]
Other controversies
[edit]Subreddit bans
[edit]In February 2017, Reddit banned the alt-right subreddit r/altright for violating its terms of service, more specifically for attempting to share private information about the man who attacked alt-right figure Richard B. Spencer.[297][298] The forum's users and moderators accused Reddit administrators of having political motivations for the ban.[299][300]
After the 2021 storming of the United States Capitol, Reddit banned the subreddit r/DonaldTrump in response to repeated policy violations and alluding to the potential influence the community had on those who participated in or supported the storming.[301] The move followed similar actions from social media platforms, Twitter, YouTube, TikTok and more.[302] The ban was criticized by those who believed it furthered an agenda and censorship of conservative ideologies.[303] The subreddit had over 52,000 members just before it was banned.[304]
Steve Huffman
[edit]In May 2016, CEO Steve Huffman said in an interview at the TNW Conference that, unlike Facebook, which "only knows what [its users are] willing to declare publicly", Reddit knows its users' "dark secrets"[305][306][307] at the same time that the website's "values" page was updated regarding its "privacy" section. The video reached the top of the website's main feed.[307][308] Shortly thereafter, announcements concerning new advertisement content drew criticism on the website.[309][310] In September, a user named "mormondocuments" released thousands of administrative documents belonging to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, an action driven by the ex-Mormon and atheist communities on Reddit. Previously, on April 22, the same user had announced his plans to do so. Church officials commented that the documents did not contain anything confidential.[311][312]
On November 23, Huffman admitted to having replaced his username with the names of r/The_Donald moderators in many insulting comments.[313][314] He did so by changing insulting comments made towards him and made it appear as if the insult were directed at the moderators of r/The_Donald.[315] On November 24, The Washington Post reported Reddit had banned the "Pizzagate" conspiracy board from their site, stating it violated their policy of posting personal information of others, triggering a wave of criticism from users on r/The_Donald, who felt the ban amounted to censorship.[316] After the forum was banned from Reddit, the words "we don't want witchhunts on our site" now appears on the former page of the Pizzagate subreddit.[317][318]
On November 30, Huffman announced changes to the algorithm of Reddit's r/all page to block "stickied" posts from a number of subreddits, such as r/The_Donald. In the announcement, he also apologized for personally editing posts by users from r/The_Donald, and declared intentions to take actions against "hundreds of the most toxic users" of Reddit and "communities whose users continually cross the line".[6][319][320]
In March 2018, it was revealed that Huffman had hidden Russian troll activity from users.[321]
Censorship concerns and protests
[edit]In February 2019, Chinese company Tencent invested $150 million into Reddit.[322][323] This resulted in a large backlash from Reddit users, who were worried about potential censorship.[324][325][326] Many posts featuring subjects censored in China, such as Tiananmen Square, Tank Man, and Winnie the Pooh, received popularity on Reddit.[323][326][327]
In late August 2021, more than 70 subreddits went private to protest against COVID-19 misinformation on Reddit, as well as Reddit's refusal to delete subreddits undermining the severity of the pandemic.[328][329] A 2021 letter from the United States Senate to Reddit CEO Steve Huffman expressed concern about the spread of COVID-19 misinformation on the platform.[15]
In January 2025, over 100 Reddit communities banned users from posting links from the X social media site after Elon Musk, its CEO, made an arm gesture at a speech which critics claimed was a Nazi salute.[330] The Verge reported that Musk had "privately pressur[ed]" the CEO of Reddit Steve Huffman to moderate content critical of him and the Trump administration, and that after their exchange, Reddit took action and temporarily banned r/WhitePeopleTwitter due to "policy violations".[331][332]
On March 5, 2025, Reddit announced that they will be issuing warnings to users who upvote "violent content", and "may consider" taking other actions against the users. The Verge reported two days later that Reddit's automatic moderation tool has been flagging the word "Luigi" as "potentially violent", including in comments or context unrelated to Luigi Mangione, the suspect in the killing of the UnitedHealthcare CEO. The moderator of r/popculture, a subreddit with over 125,000 members, stated that Reddit's AutoModerator system flagged a comment about Nintendo video game Luigi's Mansion because it included the word "Luigi", and instructed them to "check for violence"; other comments that mentioned "Luigi", even in non-violent context, were also flagged.[333][334]
Hate speech
[edit]On July 12, 2018, the creator and head moderator of the GamerGate subreddit, r/KotakuInAction, removed all of the moderators and set the forum to private, alleging it to have become "infested with racism and sexism". A Reddit employee restored the forum and its moderators an hour later.[335][336]
During the George Floyd protests in early June 2020, over 800 moderators signed an open letter demanding a policy banning hate speech, a shutdown of racist and sexist subreddits, and more employee support for moderation. Bloomberg News pointed out the company's slow reaction to r/watchpeopledie, a subreddit dedicated to videos of people dying in accidents and other situations, and the harassment that accompanied new unmoderated features like icons for purchase and public chats.[337]
On June 29, 2020, Reddit updated its content policy and introduced rules aimed at curbing the presence of communities they believed to be "promoting hate",[338] and banned approximately 2,000 subreddits that were found to be in violation of the new guidelines on the same day.[339] Larger subreddits affected by the bans included r/The_Donald,[340] r/GenderCritical[341] (the platform's largest and most active anti-transgender radical feminist subreddit),[342] and r/ChapoTrapHouse (a far-left subreddit originally created by fans of the podcast Chapo Trap House).[341] Some media outlets and political commentators also condemned the banning of the r/The_Donald and r/ChapoTrapHouse subreddits as a violation of the right to free political expression.[343]
A 2025 TIMES article listed Reddit "The Most Xenophobic Social Media Site" after the Anti-Defamation League denounced Reddit for allowing public communities to engage in racism, antisemitism, and routine hate speech without consequence.[344]
Advertising
[edit]In February 2013, Betabeat published a post that recognized the influx of multinational corporations like Costco, Taco Bell, Subaru, and McDonald's posting branded content on Reddit that was made to appear as if it was original content from legitimate Reddit users.[345] PAN Communications wrote that marketers want to "infiltrate the reddit community on behalf of their brand," but emphasized that "self-promotion is frowned upon" and Reddit's former director of communications noted that the site is "100 percent organic."[346][347][348][349] She recommended that advertisers design promotions that "spark conversations and feedback."[350] She recommended that businesses use AMAs to get attention for public figures but cautioned "It is important to approach AMAs carefully and be aware that this may not be a fit for every project or client."[351] Nissan ran a successful branded content promotion offering users free gifts to publicize a new car,[352][353] though the company was later ridiculed for suspected astroturfing when the CEO only answered puff piece questions on the site.[354][355] Taylor described these situations as "high risk" noting: "We try hard to educate people that they have to treat questions that may seem irreverent or out of left field the same as they would questions about the specific project they are promoting."[356]
Hiring practices
[edit]In March 2021, Reddit users discovered that Aimee Challenor, an English politician who had been suspended from two UK political parties, was hired as an administrator for the site. Her first suspension from the Green Party came for retaining her father as her campaign manager after his arrest on child sexual abuse charges. She was later suspended from the Liberal Democrats after tweets describing pedophilic fantasies were discovered on her partner's Twitter account. Reddit banned a moderator for posting a news article which mentioned Challenor, and some Reddit users alleged that Reddit were removing all mention of Challenor. Many subreddits, including r/Music, which had 27 million subscribers, and 46 other subreddits with over 1 million subscribers, went private in protest.[357][358][359][360] On March 24, Reddit's CEO Steve Huffman said that Challenor had been inadequately vetted before being hired and that Reddit would review its relevant internal processes. Huffman attributed user suspensions to over-indexing on anti-harassment measures.[359] Challenor was also removed from her role as a Reddit admin.[361]
Trading and cryptocurrency
[edit]The GameStop short squeeze was primarily organized on the subreddit r/wallstreetbets in January 2021.[362]
In October 2023, Reddit Moons (a site-specific cryptocurrency launched in May 2020) had seen a surge of value in 2023, at one point in mid-2023 rising past 50 cents per moon, but it crashed by more than 90% after it was announced on October 17 that the token would be "wound down" on November 8, allegedly due to scaling and regulatory issues; Reddit-centric coins DONUT and BRICK also crashed upon the news.[363]
Data breach and collection
[edit]In June 2023, The BlackCat hacker gang claimed responsibility for a February 2023 breach of Reddit's systems. On its data leak site, it claimed that it stole 80 GB of compressed data and demanded a $4.5 million ransom from Reddit. This attack did not involve data encryption like typical ransomware campaigns.[364]
In September 2024, the Federal Trade Commission released a report summarizing nine company responses (including from Reddit) to orders made by the agency pursuant to Section 6(b) of the Federal Trade Commission Act of 1914 to provide information about user and non-user data collection (including of children and teenagers) and data use by the companies that found that the companies' user and non-user data practices put individuals vulnerable to identity theft, stalking, unlawful discrimination, emotional distress and mental health issues, social stigma, and reputational harm.[365][366][367]
University of Zurich AI-generated content study
[edit]In 2025, researchers from the University of Zurich conducted a experiment on the debate subreddit r/changemyview. The researchers deployed AI-run Reddit accounts to pose as humans and actively push desired viewpoints in order to study how AI could influence opinions among human participants. The experiment was run without the consent or knowledge of the subreddit moderators for four months until one of the researchers informed them. Critics of the experiment argued it was unethical as it involved impersonation and involuntarily used Redditors as experiment participants.[368]
See also
[edit]Similar websites
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ The site's display interface is available in several common languages, but most of its user-submitted content is written in English with no built-in translation feature. Individual subreddits may opt to cater to a specific language other than English, and only allowing posts and comments to be in that language.
- ^ Reddit can be viewed without an account but registration is required to submit, comment or vote. Registration is also occasionally required to view posts marked as not safe for work.
- ^ Previously written in Lisp, then rewritten in Python in 2005.
References
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- ^ "Cheatsheet: How brands can win reddit". Digday. February 3, 2014. Archived from the original on June 28, 2016. Retrieved July 6, 2015.
"Going into it, we are honest with advertisers that redditors are opinionated," said Victoria Taylor, reddit's director of communications. "Anywhere you have opinions, people are going to have a dialog and disagree." Advertisers have to be willing to engage honestly — and cleverly — with the reddit community to win their trust.
- ^ "Nissan, Reddit defend authenticity of questions in Ghosn AMA". PR Week. January 14, 2015. Archived from the original on April 14, 2016. Retrieved July 6, 2015.
While Taylor said it's a positive that users demand authenticity, transparency, and accountability on Reddit, she noted that "it's unfortunate that people tend to try to look for negative examples." She admitted that the AMA with Nissan was not the most successful edition the platform has had... Reddit, she said, will always be "open and transparent if something doesn't seem genuine."
- ^ "Walking a fine line as a communicator on Reddit". Muck Rack. March 3, 2015. Archived from the original on July 6, 2015. Retrieved July 6, 2015.
- ^ "Reddit AMAs: A minefield worth crossing". PR Week. April 4, 2014. Archived from the original on April 14, 2016. Retrieved July 6, 2015.
- ^ Goforth, Claire (March 24, 2021). "Massive subs all go private to protest Reddit's hiring of a pedophile 'enabler'". The Daily Dot. Archived from the original on March 24, 2021.
- ^ Tamburro, Paul (March 24, 2021). "Reddit's most popular subreddits go private in protest against 'censorship'". GameRevolution. Archived from the original on March 24, 2021. Retrieved March 24, 2021.
- ^ a b Robertson, Adi (March 24, 2021). "Major subreddits are going dark to protest Reddit allegedly hiring a controversial UK politician". The Verge. Retrieved March 24, 2021.
- ^ Knowles, Tom (March 25, 2021). "Social platform in Reddit censorship row over Spectator article". The Times. Retrieved March 25, 2021.
- ^ Eccleston, Ben (March 25, 2021). "Coventry activist Aimee Challenor removed from Reddit role following backlash". CoventryLive. Retrieved April 29, 2021.
- ^ Phillips, Matt; Lorenz, Taylor (January 27, 2021). "'Dumb Money' Is on GameStop, and It's Beating Wall Street at Its Own Game". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Archived from the original on December 28, 2021. Retrieved January 29, 2021.
- ^ "Reddit ends its blockchain Community program, leads to MOON, BRICK & DONUT crashing". FXStreet. October 18, 2023. Retrieved October 18, 2023.
- ^ "The Week in Ransomware - June 23rd 2023 - The Reddit Files". BleepingComputer. Archived from the original on July 25, 2023. Retrieved July 25, 2023.
- ^ Tolentino, Daysia (September 19, 2024). "Social media companies engaged in 'vast surveillance,' FTC finds, calling status quo 'unacceptable'". NBC News. Retrieved September 21, 2024.
- ^ Del Valle, Gaby (September 19, 2024). "The FTC says social media companies can't be trusted to regulate themselves". The Verge. Vox Media. Retrieved September 21, 2024.
- ^ A Look Behind the Screens: Examining the Data Practices of Social Media and Video Streaming Services (PDF) (Report). Federal Trade Commission. 2024. Retrieved September 21, 2024.
- ^ "'Unethical' AI research on Reddit under fire". www.science.org. Retrieved May 19, 2025.
Further reading
[edit]- Forestal, Jennifer (January 2021) [December 3, 2020 (published online)]. "Beyond Gatekeeping: Propaganda, Democracy, and the Organization of Digital Publics". The Journal of Politics. 83 (1): 306–320. doi:10.1086/709300. S2CID 216325883.
External links
[edit]- Official website

- Business data for Reddit, Inc.:
- reddittorjg6rue252oqsxryoxengawnmo46qy4kyii5wtqnwfj4ooad.onion
(Accessing link help) - "Live Episode! Reddit: Alexis Ohanian & Steve Huffman"—How I Built This (audio interview with founders)
- Reddit on Reddit
History
Founding and Early Development (2005–2010)
Reddit was founded on June 23, 2005, by Steve Huffman and Alexis Ohanian, recent University of Virginia computer science graduates and roommates, in Medford, Massachusetts.[15] The duo, inspired by Ohanian's email pitching the idea to Huffman, aimed to build a platform for user-submitted links ranked by community votes, positioning it as "the front page of the internet."[16] As participants in Y Combinator's first funding batch, they secured $100,000 in seed capital to develop the site, which launched with basic features including upvote/downvote voting and comment threads.[6] Initial adoption was slow, hampered by technical limitations and competition from sites like Digg, resulting in minimal traffic by late 2005.[17] Aaron Swartz contributed early code improvements, enhancing scalability.[18] Subreddits—user-created, topic-specific communities—emerged experimentally in early 2006, with the first instances like r/programming and r/features enabling segmented discussions beyond the main feed.[19] This structure fostered niche engagement, though subreddit proliferation remained limited until later years.[20] On October 31, 2006, Condé Nast Publications acquired Reddit for around $10 million, integrating it under Wired's digital arm and providing infrastructure support.[21][22] Post-acquisition, the platform open-sourced its codebase in June 2008, inviting developer contributions. A 2008 Digg redesign alienated users, prompting a migration that spiked Reddit's traffic and subreddit count.[23] By 2008, monthly users reached 2.6 million, reflecting steady organic growth amid these catalysts.[24] Through 2010, Reddit solidified its role as a decentralized discussion hub, with IAmA (Ask Me Anything) sessions gaining traction in 2009 to draw high-profile participants.Expansion and Initial Monetization Challenges (2011–2015)
Reddit saw rapid growth in user engagement and traffic during this period. Monthly pageviews hit 1 billion by 2011, then rose to 37 billion in 2012, 56 billion in 2013, and 71.25 billion in 2014, fueled by organic community expansion and more subreddits.[25] Unique monthly visitors increased from about 70 million in 2013 to 85 million in 2014 and 120 million in 2015, with traffic doubling every 15 months due to mobile adoption and viral sharing.[24][26] This demanded infrastructure upgrades, like migrations for peak loads, as server costs grew while relying on volunteer moderators and user-generated content for curation.[26] Under CEO Yishan Wong, who served from 2012 to November 2014, Reddit emphasized engineering hires and scaling over heavy commercialization to protect its community ethos.[27] Wong prioritized stability during expansion but resigned citing decision-making fatigue and board conflicts, including office costs.[28] In September 2014, a $50 million Series B round led by Sam Altman, with investors like Snoop Dogg and Jared Leto, valued Reddit at $500 million and funded hiring and infrastructure, underscoring reliance on venture capital.[29][30] Monetization remained elusive, with Reddit unprofitable as of 2013 despite its audience size, due to high infrastructure expenses outpacing ad revenue.[31] Efforts included Reddit Gold, a premium feature for gilding content, which generated modest income through virtual awards but saw limited uptake.[17] Native advertising via promoted posts blended with organic content but underperformed, as niche communities rejected commercialization clashing with ad-free norms.[17] An underdeveloped ad platform and edgy content deterred advertisers, perpetuating a cycle of rising costs outpacing income and requiring ongoing funding.[32][33]Leadership Shifts and Policy Evolutions (2016–2020)
In November 2016, Reddit CEO Steve Huffman—who returned to the role in 2015—faced backlash for editing comments in the pro-Trump subreddit r/The_Donald. He changed references to himself ("spez") into insults against Trump moderators, responding to false pedophilia accusations in a Pizzagate thread.[34] Huffman apologized, describing it as a de-escalation effort against harassment, but critics called it an abuse of power that eroded neutrality. He insisted the edits were a one-time reaction to abuse, underscoring tensions with some communities.[34] From 2016 to 2019, Huffman prioritized operational stability amid growth. No major executive exits occurred beyond routine changes, with core leaders—including board member and co-founder Alexis Ohanian—focusing on monetization and moderation.[35] Reddit bolstered anti-harassment policies, expanding 2015 measures to quarantine or ban subreddits for violence or doxxing. In November 2017, it banned r/incels—a group of self-identified "involuntarily celibate" men—for glorifying violence against women and breaching rules on involuntary pornography and brigading.[36][37] The ban, affecting over 40,000 subscribers, aimed to safeguard users but prompted off-platform shifts and discussions on deplatforming versus self-moderation.[36] Likewise, r/pizzagate faced restrictions in late 2016 for harassment linked to baseless conspiracies, continuing efforts against content risking real-world harm.[38] By 2020, amid scrutiny over online extremism, Reddit revised policies on June 5 to prohibit hate based on identity or vulnerability, aligning with goals of civil discourse.[39] This led to quarantining and banning over 2,000 subreddits on June 29, including r/The_Donald (790,000 subscribers) for violations like vote manipulation, ban evasion, and glorifying violence, alongside left-leaning r/ChapoTrapHouse for similar issues.[38] Huffman justified the bans as essential to reduce post-2016 election toxicity, welcoming individual Trump supporters but not toxic communities; conservatives accused selective enforcement of political bias, citing heavier impacts on right-wing forums.[40] On the same day, Ohanian resigned from the board, blaming past moderation failures and the George Floyd protests, and urged replacing himself with a Black director for diversity—succeeded by Y Combinator's Michael Seibel.[41] These steps shifted toward aggressive hate speech enforcement, with 85 million content removals in 2020 (up 62% from prior years), sparking protests over perceived overreach.[42]Pre-IPO Restructuring and API Tensions (2021–2023)
In late 2021, Reddit confidentially filed an S-1 registration with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission to prepare for an initial public offering amid a strong market for tech listings.[43] However, rising interest rates and a tech sector downturn led the company to pause plans by early 2022.[44] Through 2022 and 2023, Reddit strengthened finances by hiring finance and compliance executives to align with public market requirements and raising $748 million in an August 2021 Series F funding round at a $10 billion valuation.[44] By early 2023, with IPO goals for later that year, Reddit prioritized monetizing user-generated data amid rising AI training demands.[45] On April 18, it announced fees for its application programming interface (API)—free since 2008—to boost revenue and limit unauthorized data scraping.[46] CEO Steve Huffman's June 9, 2023, blog post specified $0.24 per 1,000 calls for commercial use starting July 1, exempting academic and some non-commercial applications without grandfathering third-party clients.[47] The policy drew opposition from moderators and users reliant on apps like Apollo, which featured custom interfaces and advanced moderation tools missing from Reddit's official client.[48] Developer Christian Selig projected $20 million annual costs from 45 million monthly requests, forcing closure without user fees.[49] Moderators warned of impaired subreddit functions, given dependence on third-party tools for automation and accessibility, including screen readers for visually impaired users.[10] Protests escalated into coordinated blackouts, with over 8,000 subreddits—including more than two-thirds of the top 100 by subscribers—going private on June 12, 2023, to oppose API fees and insufficient moderator consultation.[50] Organized by networks like r/ModCoord, the planned 48-hour action extended indefinitely in major communities such as r/science (33 million subscribers) and r/videos (28 million), prompting Reddit to remove hundreds of volunteer moderators and forcibly restore access in some cases.[51] Huffman defended the changes in his June 9 post and a June 10 ask-me-anything session, arguing they supported pre-IPO growth and data control while affecting only a minority of users.[47][52] Ahead of the July 1 deadline, third-party apps shut down, including Apollo on June 30 after seven years due to unsustainable costs.[53] Clients like RedReader and Infinity followed, curtailing alternatives to Reddit's ad-heavy official app.[48] Blackouts cut web traffic by 20% on June 12 (per Similarweb), yet Reddit reported accelerated user growth afterward, crediting its mobile base unaffected by API tools.[10] The events exposed tensions between volunteer communities and commercial priorities, delaying but not halting the March 2024 IPO after market recovery.[44]IPO and Post-Public Era (2024–Present)
Reddit, Inc. conducted its initial public offering on March 21, 2024, pricing 22 million shares at $34 each on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker RDDT.[54] The offering valued the company at approximately $6.4 billion on a fully diluted basis and raised $748 million, including shares sold by the company and existing shareholders.[54] Shares debuted strongly, opening at $47 and closing the first trading day at $50.44—a 48% increase from the IPO price—reflecting high investor demand amid a recovering market for social media listings.[54] Following the IPO, Reddit's stock showed volatility but trended upward, fueled by revenue diversification and user engagement. By October 22, 2025, it closed at $197.05, exceeding 400% returns from the IPO price for early investors.[55] First-quarter 2025 earnings on May 1 highlighted post-IPO financial stability, while second-quarter results on July 31 reported $500 million in revenue—a 78% year-over-year rise—$89 million net income, and 110.4 million daily active uniques.[56][57] Growth stemmed from expanded advertising and data licensing, despite ongoing scrutiny of content moderation and profitability. A key post-IPO strategy monetized user-generated content via AI training data licensing. In February 2024, alongside its IPO filing, Reddit signed a multi-year deal with Google for $60 million annually to enhance search and AI models like Gemini.[58] Similar agreements with OpenAI for ChatGPT training supported non-advertising revenue amid AI firms' unauthorized data scraping.[59] By September 2025, Reddit negotiated expanded pacts with Google and OpenAI, shifting to dynamic pricing based on usage to leverage its dataset's scale.[60] These deals established Reddit as a vital AI data provider, driving revenue gains and stock rises, while igniting debates on data ownership and creator compensation.[61] As of October 2025, Reddit emphasized infrastructure scaling and user retention post-listing, with third-quarter earnings set for October 30, 2025, amid efforts to address growth and governance issues from pre-IPO API conflicts.[62] Its market capitalization surpassed $30 billion by late October, signaling investor faith in AI monetization despite social media challenges.[63]Platform Features and Mechanics
Subreddits and Community Structure
Subreddits are Reddit's core organizational units: independent, topic-specific forums where users discuss, share content, and interact under community-defined guidelines. They position as alternatives to Facebook groups through interest-based focus and pseudonymity, offering greater anonymity than real-name platforms.[64] Each subreddit uses a "r/" prefix followed by a descriptive name, such as r/news for general news or r/science for scientific topics, enabling niche communities from broad to highly specialized interests—including numerous NSFW subreddits for adult content like photos, videos, and themed discussions. Examples include r/gonewild, featuring amateur user-submitted images.[65] Registered users create subreddits via the "Create Community" option in account settings, if the name is unique and complies with content policies; administrators recommend a clear purpose to avoid low-quality or abandoned communities. As of 2025, Reddit hosts over 2.2 million subreddits, with approximately 138,000 active based on regular posting and engagement metrics.[66] Subreddits rely on volunteer moderators, or "mods," who enforce community rules while following Reddit's Content Policy. Appointed by existing mods or founders, they approve or remove posts, ban users, and deploy automoderator bots to flag spam or enforce flairs. Typical rules ban self-promotion, require civility, and limit off-topic or NSFW posts outside designated areas. Dedicated NSFW subreddits allow consensual adult content—including nudity, pornography, and profanity—if marked with NSFW tags (Rule 6), but prohibit non-consensual intimate media, minors, illegal material, or predatory behavior to ensure safety, privacy, and compliance.[67] Users toggle NSFW visibility in account preferences on web and app. In 2026, Reddit implemented age verification using the third-party service Persona, primarily in the UK to comply with the Online Safety Act, requiring methods such as birthdate entry, ID upload, or facial selfie for accessing NSFW content; this primarily enables viewing but may also apply to posting in regulated regions.[68][69][70] The Moderator Code of Conduct, updated in 2024 and 2025, requires promoting positive engagement and site policies, with violations risking removal. To prevent overreach and burnout, 2025 limits cap mods at five subreddits over 100,000 weekly visitors (one over 1 million), phased in to retain experienced leaders.[71][72][73] Subreddits operate in public, restricted, or private modes, determining visibility and participation: public subreddits are open to all for viewing and posting; restricted ones require approval for posts but allow open viewing; private communities limit access to approved members only. Content is aggregated and sorted via algorithms into "Hot," "New," and "Top" feeds, prioritizing upvoted posts for prominence, which incentivizes quality and relevance within the community's norms. This decentralized model enables rapid formation of user-driven groups but relies heavily on moderator diligence, as unchecked violations can lead to site-wide interventions by Reddit administrators. Over 100,000 active subreddits sustain daily interactions, with larger ones like r/AskReddit exceeding millions of subscribers and serving as hubs for broad discourse.[74][75]Core Interaction Tools: Voting, Posting, and Commenting
Reddit's voting mechanism uses upvote and downvote arrows next to posts and comments to indicate approval or disapproval. Upvotes boost visibility of content that adds value to a subreddit or the platform, while downvotes lower prominence for material that detracts or breaks norms. Scores display net upvotes minus downvotes, but algorithms—including confidence intervals and temporal decay—counter manipulation, so raw counts do not directly set rankings. Sorting options like "hot," "new," "top," and "controversial" blend scores with timing; "hot," for example, prioritizes rapid upvote gains relative to age.[76] New accounts receive 1 post karma automatically via self-upvotes on initial posts and comments, which do not count toward gains from others.[77] Karma tracks net upvotes minus downvotes separately for posts and comments, serving as a reputation score displayed on profiles with permanent usernames (unlike changeable display names).[78] Many subreddits enforce minimum karma thresholds—ranging from 10 to thousands as of 2024—to post, deterring spam from new or low-activity users. Downvotes subtract karma equivalently to upvotes adding it, with non-linear weighting to curb abuse; however, low karma from one post does not penalize future posts' visibility, as rankings evaluate each independently by votes, timing, and engagement. Karma's main impact limits posting access in thresholded subreddits rather than site-wide promotion.[79][80] Users post within subreddits, submitting text self-posts, external links, images, videos, or polls, each with a title limited to 300 characters. Submissions must follow subreddit rules in sidebars—often barring reposts, low-effort, or off-topic content—with violations risking removal or bans; site-wide policies also prohibit illegal, harassing, or deceptive posts, including Rule 8 against interfering with site use.[81][82] Titles cannot be edited after submission to preserve integrity, but bodies can be, adding an "[edited]" label with timestamps for corrections without hidden changes.[83] New accounts face cooldowns and other restrictions until earning karma, curbing spam; as of October 2025, eligibility guides alert users to unmet criteria like age or karma minimums.[84] Commenting supports threaded discussions, with replies nesting under posts or prior comments via indentation, forming expandable trees. Users upvote or downvote comments to affect thread order, and edit them indefinitely, adding an "[edited]" indicator for accountability. In SFW subreddits enabling the feature, users attach images via the comment box icon, uploading and resizing to 240-pixel max dimensions; otherwise, they paste links to external hosts like Imgur if unavailable due to settings or NSFW status.[85] Nesting caps at about 10 levels to avoid excess indentation, flattening deeper replies; this aids focused debate but may hide context in busy threads. Edits retain original timestamps and append history for mods and users, though full logs are private, with self-reported reasons encouraged for clarity.[83] Users can save posts and comments to a personal collection accessible via their profile, allowing private bookmarking of content such as videos and photos for later reference. Custom feeds enable the aggregation of multiple subreddits into user-defined, themed content streams.[86][87]Specialized Features: AMAs, Chat, and Rewards
Reddit's "Ask Me Anything" (AMA) sessions originated organically in communities, with the dedicated r/IAmA subreddit facilitating interactions from May 2009, where users—often public figures, experts, or notable individuals—post threads in relevant subreddits inviting questions from redditors and answer in threaded comments after verifying identity if needed.[88] This fosters unfiltered dialogue, hosting figures like Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak in March 2016 and Netflix co-founder Marc Randolph in February 2021.[89][90] Announced AMAs receive algorithmic boosts upon starting, elevating threads in subreddit feeds regardless of timing.[91] Effective for engagement, AMAs depend on host quality, as poor responses invite community criticism and underscore reliance on authentic interaction over scripted promotion.[92] Chat functionality, launched in 2017, enables real-time private or group messaging among redditors who are online simultaneously, distinguishing it from asynchronous direct messages by supporting immediate, ephemeral conversations. To prevent spam and bots, Reddit imposes restrictions on sending chats for new accounts less than 7 days old, those with low karma, unverified email addresses, or minimal activity, including daily limits on messages or invites; account suspensions, shadowbans, or temporary glitches and server issues can also prevent sending.[93][94] Users typically address these by waiting to meet age requirements, gaining karma through posts and comments, verifying their email, or checking account status.[95] In April 2020, Reddit added the "Start Chatting" prompt in popular subreddits, automatically matching users into small group chats based on community membership to encourage spontaneous discussions.[96] Features include optional persistent messaging, which prevents deletion of direct chat history by either party once enabled, prioritizing record-keeping for sensitive exchanges.[97] Reddit does not permit permanent deletion of entire chat conversations for all parties; users can only delete individual messages they sent, removing them from view for everyone unless persistent messaging is enabled—to delete, long-press the message on the app and select "Delete," or hover over it on reddit.com and click the trash icon.[98] Direct chats can be hidden to remove them from the inbox (though they may reappear if messaged again): on reddit.com, open the chat, click the gear icon, and select "Hide chat"; on the app, swipe left on the conversation and tap "Hide," or open the chat and select "Hide chat" from the overflow menu. Group chats can be left to cease participation: on reddit.com, select "Leave group chat" from the gear icon; on the app, swipe left and tap "Leave." Only sent messages can be deleted, not received ones, and blocking a user prevents future messages but does not delete existing chats.[99] By June 2025, chat expanded to consolidate all platform messaging, phasing out legacy private messages in favor of a unified, faster inbox integrated with notifications, aiming to streamline user communication amid growing mobile usage.[100][101] Reddit's rewards system evolved from Reddit Gold, a virtual currency for highlighting exemplary content. The original coins and awards framework—including Gold, Silver, and custom badges—was discontinued in July 2023 due to misalignment with user preferences for simpler recognition.[102][103] In September 2023, Reddit launched a contributor-focused Gold program, enabling top posters and moderators in select subreddits to earn payouts based on metrics like post quality and engagement.[104] After backlash, the awards system relaunched in May 2024 with revised mechanics: purchasable awards decoupled from Premium subscriptions, broadening access to gilding posts and comments.[105][106] This update prioritizes creator incentives, tying Gold to revenue sharing—historically a symbol of prestige—while effectiveness hinges on subreddit opt-in and avoiding pay-to-win perceptions.[107]Evolving and Discontinued Capabilities
Reddit's posting and content capabilities expanded from link aggregation to multimedia and interactive formats. Starting in 2005 with text links and voting, commenting launched in December 2005 to enable threaded discussions central to engagement.[15] Native image uploads arrived in 2009, reducing reliance on hosts like Imgur, followed by phased video embedding and full native video support in 2017 to rival YouTube.[108] These changes enabled subreddits to host GIFs, live streams, and diverse media, boosting community content creation and retention.[109] User profile features shifted from static overviews to dynamic feeds for personalization and followership. Mid-2010s updates added direct posting independent of subreddits, with follower subscriptions expanded around 2015 to emulate social media timelines. June 2025 brought curation controls to hide posts, comments, subreddit content, or NSFW material from public profiles—potentially leaving them empty for viewers—while retaining visibility in original communities.[110] The 2017 awards system introduced virtual coins for tipping, with iterative premium updates and community feedback, though 2023 changes cut availability before partial restoration amid backlash.[111] Chat, added in 2019, grew into group and subreddit rooms for real-time interaction alongside commenting, while early-2020s search and recommendations adopted machine learning for improved discovery.[108] To curb spam, abuse, and ban evasion, Reddit bolstered VPN detection in 2025–2026, focusing on datacenter IPs; residential IP proxies from ISPs evaded blocks more effectively, though behavior or overuse could still flag accounts.[112][113] To streamline operations and prioritize core features, Reddit discontinued several capabilities, citing resource constraints or strategic shifts. Reddit Gifts, including the Secret Santa program launched in 2010, ended in 2021 after over 1.3 million exchanges, with operations ceasing by January 2022 to focus on platform enhancements.[114] Reddit Talk, a 2021 live audio feature similar to Clubhouse, shut down in March 2023 due to technical issues and low adoption.[115] The free Reddit API tier ended in June 2023, imposing per-query pricing that made third-party apps like Apollo and Reddit is Fun unsustainable.[116] Reddit consolidated designs by redirecting new.reddit.com to a unified redesign in August 2024, eliminating multiple versions for faster iteration. This deprecated old.reddit.com features like profile-level mod invites, pre-comment bans, and some sorting options, which were not migrated, prompting complaints from moderators and power users.[117][118] The 2015 experiment "The Button," tracking collective restraint with a resettable timer, concluded on June 5 after over one million presses as a one-off event.[119]Technology and Infrastructure
Backend Architecture and Scalability
Reddit's backend began as a 2005 monolithic application in Lisp, quickly rewritten in Python with the web.py framework by December that year to boost development speed and manage rising traffic.[109] It later adopted a microservices system, adding GraphQL for federated queries around 2017 and replacing Thrift with gRPC for inter-service communication to improve modularity and scalability.[109] [120] Core servers run Python, with Go handling specific GraphQL subgraphs, Node.js for select frontend services, and job queues like RabbitMQ enabling asynchronous processing alongside rapid iteration.[109] [120] PostgreSQL stores primary relational data—including user accounts, posts, subreddits, and comments—using table sharding (e.g., modulo subreddit ID for queues) and partitioning to reduce contention and handle write loads.[120] [109] Cassandra provides durable, high-throughput storage for denormalized lists like comments, while AWS Aurora PostgreSQL manages media metadata via JSONB fields and partitioning, delivering under 50 ms latency at 100,000 reads per second.[109] [120] Caching employs Memcached clusters for hot data and Redis for sessions and temporary items, with atomic invalidation during updates like voting to ensure consistency under heavy load.[109] [121] Reddit achieved scalability through horizontal scaling on AWS infrastructure after a full migration from physical servers in 2009, using EC2 instances, Kubernetes for orchestration, and load balancers for request distribution.[109] [121] Initial EC2 challenges included network latency spikes (10x slower Memcached access) and cache bloat from unexpired data; these were resolved by adopting SSDs (cutting database servers from 12 to 1 with 16x performance gains) and improving monitoring beyond Ganglia.[121] Asynchronous queues manage high-volume tasks like vote increments and post submissions, complemented by CDNs such as Fastly for static content, media delivery, and edge caching to handle "hug of death" surges from external links.[120] [109] By 2012, this setup supported 1 billion monthly pageviews on 240 servers, with traffic doubling every 15 months; modern additions like Kafka for change data capture and blue-green deployments enable zero-downtime updates during peaks from events like AMAs.[121] [109]Hosting, Servers, and Performance
Reddit relies on Amazon Web Services (AWS) for primary cloud hosting, enabling dynamic scaling for fluctuating traffic from hundreds of millions of daily active users.[122] Services deploy via Kubernetes for orchestration and fault tolerance across AWS regions, with Spinnaker supporting continuous pipelines.[122] This distributed setup features backend services in Python using the Pyramid framework to handle content serving and user interactions.[123][124] Configurations include PostgreSQL for structured data, NoSQL options like Cassandra for high-write loads, and Memcached caching to cut latency.[121] The 2013 switch to solid-state drives (SSDs) for databases shrank server needs from 12 to one instance with ample capacity, yielding I/O gains from hardware over refactoring.[121] The infrastructure team credits AWS elasticity for peak-load handling without on-premises hardware.[125] Outages and slowdowns persist due to external dependencies and internal limits. A October 20, 2025, DNS failure in AWS's US-EAST-1 region hit Reddit and over 100 services, raising errors and latencies for nine hours.[126][127] Downdetector logs frequent delays during viral surges, revealing predictive scaling gaps on cloud setups.[128] Reddit's status page reflects monitoring and swift fixes, but repeated disruptions highlight unmitigated AWS propagations despite layered defenses.[129]Mobile Apps and User Interface Changes
Reddit released its first official mobile apps for iOS and Android on April 7, 2016, ending reliance on third-party clients for mobile access.[130][131] The iOS app drew from the acquired Alien Blue client, while the Android version filled native support gaps and launched initially in the US, UK, Canada, and Australia.[132] Core features included subreddit browsing, upvoting, and commenting; the codebase grew to about 2.5 million lines by 2025.[133] Later updates improved performance and interfaces, with public release notes available for both platforms.[134] The 2018 platform redesign standardized navigation and feed layouts across web and apps, while preserving native app optimizations.[135] By 2023, app updates prioritized speed, like quicker comment loading, despite complaints about the mobile website's sluggishness.[136] In early 2024, a major UI refresh brought a streamlined layout, updated profiles, and activity controls, phased in for users.[137] It removed 2023 layout options, causing abrupt shifts without easy opt-out paths—especially on desktop, but also affecting app sync.[138][139] 2025 updates added better profile views in feeds and search, plus bug fixes, but often without notice, frustrating users over unasked changes like oversized elements suited to mobile on desktops.[140][141] Reddit favors algorithmic personalization, like "For You" feeds, and limits sorting options to drive engagement, even amid criticism.[142]Design Evolution and Logo Updates
Reddit launched in June 2005 with a minimalist web interface featuring a simple text-based layout that emphasized threaded discussions and voting mechanics. Its mascot Snoo—an abstract orange alien figure created by co-founder Alexis Ohanian using basic vector graphics in an oval-headed, stick-limbed form labeled "Reddit" in a sans-serif font—debuted alongside.[143] This aesthetic prioritized functionality over visual polish, reflecting the platform's Lisp-based startup origins and resource constraints, with Snoo as a quirky, community-voted icon rather than a polished brand element.[144] Over the next decade, incremental UI tweaks emphasized scalability and usability, including the 2010 mobile overhaul with rewritten CSS, a refreshed color scheme of orange accents, and improved navigation for smartphone users—changes that preserved Snoo's static, two-dimensional form.[135] By 2017, Reddit updated its branding to an all-orange Snoo silhouette with a black "Reddit" wordmark, seeking a cleaner identity amid user growth while retaining the mascot's simple lines to convey the site's humorous, user-driven character.[145] The most significant pre-2023 evolution came in 2018, as a team of 20 designers revamped desktop and mobile interfaces over a year, adding rounded elements, better typography for readability, and a modern grid for posts and comments to handle rising traffic and ads. Yet this sparked user backlash over disrupted navigation, perceived bloat, slow performance, and phasing out "old Reddit."[135][146] In November 2023, ahead of its IPO, Reddit collaborated with Pentagram on a rebrand that unveiled a redesigned Snoo—adding three-dimensional depth, opposable thumbs for a more anthropomorphic and conversational pose, and highlights for dynamism—alongside custom typefaces: Reddit Sans for body text, Reddit Display evoking speech bubbles, and variants for scale versatility.[147][148] The update introduced orange-red shades for energy, conversation bubble motifs for threaded interactions, and accessibility gains like higher contrast ratios to enhance mainstream appeal while preserving Snoo's alien core. Changes deployed progressively across web, apps, and marketing, with the 2017 logo retained in legacy contexts until at least 2024.[149][150] These shifts mark Reddit's move from amateur, community-rooted visuals to professional, investor-focused branding amid scaling demands and social media rivalry.[151]Business Model and Operations
Advertising and Revenue Streams
Reddit's primary revenue stream is advertising, which comprised approximately 93% of its total quarterly revenue as of Q2 2025, when ad sales reached $465 million, an 84% increase year-over-year.[56] [152] The platform offers advertisers self-serve tools to create promoted posts that integrate into users' feeds alongside organic content, targeting specific subreddits, demographics, interests, and behaviors from community interactions.[153] Additional formats include large promoted image ads (LPAs), carousel ads, and video ads, priced via cost-per-click (CPC) or cost-per-thousand-impressions (CPM). CPC auctions consider bids, ad quality scores (from click-through rates, query relevance, and landing pages), targeting precision (subreddits, locations), and competition; advertisers pick CPC for traffic or CPM for impressions, with averages of $0.50 to $2.00 per action.[154] [155] [156] Growth has accelerated through automation, refined metrics, and relevance-boosting partnerships, yet adoption trails larger platforms given Reddit's niche, community focus.[157] Secondary revenue includes data licensing to AI developers for training models on Reddit's datasets. Deals in 2024 with Google and OpenAI drove $35 million in Q2 2025 "other revenue," a 200% year-over-year rise that diversifies from ads.[56] [153] Reddit Premium, rebranded from "Gold" in 2015, delivers ad-free access, custom avatars, and priority support at $5.99 monthly or $59.99 annually. It grants no exemptions from rules, filters, shadowbans, or moderation—Premium users face identical enforcement as free ones—yielding modest upgrades under 5% of total revenue.[158][8] API fees, launched in 2023 despite rate-limit backlash, monetize third-party apps and data scraping, adding to non-ad income.[153] For fiscal year 2024, Reddit reported total revenue of $1.3 billion, with advertising at $1.19 billion and other sources at $114.75 million, reflecting post-IPO scaling after its March 2024 public listing on the NYSE under ticker RDDT.[159] Projections indicate global ad revenue could reach $1.8 billion in 2025, driven by international expansion and AI-enhanced targeting, though profitability hinges on controlling content moderation costs and user retention amid platform controversies.[160]| Revenue Stream | FY 2024 Amount | % of Total | Key Drivers |
|---|---|---|---|
| Advertising | $1.19 billion | ~91% | Promoted content, targeting tools[159] |
| Other (data licensing, Premium, API) | $114.75 million | ~9% | AI deals, subscriptions[159] |
API Policies and Developer Ecosystem
Reddit's API, documented publicly since 2008, enables developers to access listings, submissions, and user data through JSON endpoints for posts and comments, including image URLs (often on i.redd.it), previews, and photo metadata via fields like post_hint="image". Access requires OAuth authentication, rate limits, and developer terms compliance.[161] It offered free low-volume use for moderation bots and analytics tools, with limits of about 100 queries per minute per OAuth client.[161] In December 2015, Reddit introduced standardized API Terms of Use, granting non-exclusive rights while banning competing services that threaten core offerings.[162] Policy changes in 2023, during IPO preparations, updated Developer Terms and Data API agreements on April 18 to add commercial pricing and data restrictions.[163] Effective June 19 for terms and July 1 for pricing, high-volume commercial access cost $0.24 per 1,000 calls, aiming for under $1 per user monthly for third-party clients.[47][46] These banned API data use for training large language models or AI, even in research, to prevent exploitation like Google's Bard scraping.[164] Non-commercial and low-volume uses, including moderation tools, stayed free or discounted, with exemptions for accessibility apps.[165] The 2023 updates triggered backlash from developers and moderators, who argued pricing made volunteer tools unviable, resulting in shutdowns like Apollo and a June 2023 "blackout" protest across over 8,000 subreddits.protest[166][167] Reddit defended the changes as vital for sustainability, citing API costs inflated by AI data demands and third-party apps' 4% volume share.API market share[168] Afterward, the ecosystem contracted: many apps closed due to scaling costs—e.g., Apollo's $1.7 million monthly estimate—while survivors like Sync for Reddit and Narwhal shifted to subscriptions or limited features for niche users.[169] Spam-detection and community bots faced disruptions, but Reddit bolstered native tools like AutoMod to address them.[165] By 2025, the ecosystem stabilized with reduced third-party reliance, as official apps gained greater usage. A beta Reddit Developer Platform (launched January 2025) seeks to re-engage creators, including game developers and moderators, via structured integrations under updated terms.[170][171] Current terms mandate OAuth authentication, content policy adherence, minimal data storage, and manual approvals for commercial or research access.[172][173] In 2026, legitimate programmatic searching uses the Reddit Data API's /search endpoint to query posts and comments with parameters like q (query), sort options, time filters, and up to 100 results per request. Access requires OAuth2 authentication and developer portal approval; it remains free for non-commercial, research, and moderation uses on a case-by-case basis, while commercial or high-volume access incurs fees with rate limits of about 60 requests per minute.[161] The Python library PRAW simplifies API interactions.[174] Restrictions have prompted alternatives like web scraping (using BeautifulSoup, Requests, Scrapy, or Apify) or services such as PainOnSocial for pre-processed data, though these risk Terms of Service violations and IP blocks.[175] Retrospectives note a modest user exodus—7.5% account deletions among protesters by July 2025—with no policy reversals, highlighting Reddit's focus on controlled data monetization over open access.[176]Corporate Structure, Hiring, and Executive Compensation
Reddit, Inc. is incorporated in Delaware and operates as a public company listed on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE: RDDT) following its initial public offering on March 21, 2024.[177] The corporate headquarters is located at 1455 Market Street in [San Francisco](/page/San Francisco), California.[178] Governance is provided by a board of directors, chaired by David Habiger since November 2023, with members including co-founder Steve Huffman and other independent directors focused on audit, compensation, and nominating functions.[179] The board oversees strategic decisions, risk management, and executive performance, reflected in its ISS Governance QualityScore of 9 as of October 1, 2025, with strong scores in shareholder rights and compensation.[178] Key executives include Steve Huffman, co-founder and CEO since July 2015, overseeing product, engineering, and business strategy; Jen Wong as chief operating officer, managing operations and growth; Chris Slowe as chief technology officer, directing infrastructure and scalability; Drew Vollero as chief financial officer, handling financial reporting and investor relations; and other senior leaders such as Ben Lee, chief legal officer.[180] [181] This long-tenured team, drawing from Reddit's early days and post-2015 revival, reports to the board and advances user-generated content monetization and platform expansion. Hiring practices prioritize technical talent in engineering, data science, and community management within a performance-driven culture. In May 2025, CEO Huffman stated that prior employees "were not working hard enough," linking past productivity shortfalls to low output and defending stricter efficiency demands during post-IPO growth.[182] The company uses equity incentives to attract and retain staff, awarding stock to most employees, though pre-IPO dilution has faced criticism.[177] The board's Compensation and Talent Committee determines executive compensation through base salaries, annual incentives, and long-term equity awards linked to metrics like revenue growth and user engagement.[183] [184] For fiscal year 2023, CEO Steve Huffman's total reached $193.2 million—a $341,346 base salary, $792,000 bonus, and mainly pre-IPO stock awards—drawing backlash from unpaid volunteer moderators, whom he distinguished from executives by their differing incentives and responsibilities.[185] [186] In 2024, his pay fell to $2.61 million, including a $531,154 base salary and a 225% bonus for strong performance.[187] [188] This structure ties pay to shareholder value, though critics argue it favors founders over other stakeholders.[189]Financial Performance Pre- and Post-IPO
Prior to its initial public offering (IPO) on March 21, 2024, Reddit operated at a loss for nearly two decades, accumulating net losses of approximately $1.6 billion from inception through 2023, driven by high operating expenses including stock-based compensation exceeding $500 million annually in recent years and investments in infrastructure and moderation.[190][191] Revenue grew steadily, primarily from advertising, which accounted for over 90% of income, with U.S. sources comprising the majority.[192] The following table summarizes Reddit's annual revenue and net income/loss from 2020 to 2023, as disclosed in its S-1 filing:| Year | Revenue ($M) | Net Loss ($M) | YoY Revenue Growth (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2020 | 229 | Not specified in aggregate | - |
| 2021 | 485 | Not specified in aggregate | 112 |
| 2022 | 667 | 159 | 37 |
| 2023 | 804 | 91 | 21 |
User Base and Community Dynamics
Demographics, Growth Metrics, and Participation
Reddit's users skew young, with 44% aged 18-29 in 2025 and over 70% from Gen Z and Millennials, yielding an average age of 23.03.[200][201] The platform shows a strong male skew, with the highest male usage and lowest female usage among social media sites.[202] Politically, users lean liberal: a 2016 Pew survey of news consumers found 47% liberal, 13% conservative, and 39% moderate.[203] Geographically, 49.59% of daily active users are in the United States, followed by notable shares in India, the United Kingdom, Canada, and Brazil.[200] Post-IPO growth has accelerated through international expansion and mobile adoption. In Q2 2025, daily active unique users reached 110.4 million worldwide, with weekly active users at 416.4 million—up from 342.3 million the prior year.[74] Projections showed monthly active users surpassing 1.2 billion early that year, alongside over 500 million total accounts created.[201][204] The U.S. leads national bases, trailed by India (64.1 million weekly actives), the UK (53.9 million), and Canada (40.8 million).[74] Participation prioritizes active creation over passive consumption, with about 116,000 subreddits in mid-2025.[205] That year, Reddit shifted subreddit metrics to weekly visitors (unique users over 28 days) and contributions (non-removed posts and comments), supplanting subscriber counts for better engagement reflection.[206] Sustained activity persists, as seen in a 24% year-over-year increase in posts, comments, and votes in technology communities by 2018.[207] Daily actives rose 39% to 101.7 million by late 2024, highlighting content-driven engagement.[9]| Key User Metrics (Q2 2025) | Value |
|---|---|
| Daily Active Uniques (DAUq) | 110.4 million [74] |
| Weekly Active Users (WAU) | 416.4 million [74] |
Moderation Systems and Volunteer Roles
Reddit's moderation is decentralized: volunteer moderators, known as "mods," oversee individual subreddits, while a smaller team of paid administrators handles site-wide enforcement.[71] [208] This approach allows niche or gray-area discussions to persist longer in dedicated communities than on algorithm-driven platforms like Facebook, Instagram, or X, leading to views of Reddit as less regulated overall.[209] Unpaid volunteers, mods enforce subreddit rules, remove off-topic or violating content, ban disruptive users, and foster norms suited to each community's purpose.[210] [211] They use tools including manual removal queues, user flagging, and logs that track actions for transparency.[212] AutoModerator, a configurable bot, filters posts by keywords, karma thresholds, or spam patterns to ease workloads in busy subreddits.[213] Other aids include AI tools like Crowd Control, which conceals low-quality comments from new or low-reputation users, and post-creation warnings for rule violations.[214] [215] Mods follow Reddit's Moderator Code of Conduct, aligning with site rules against illegal content, harassment, or doxxing; enforcement depends on self-reports and admin action.[216] Administrators, as full-time staff, hold site-wide powers to quarantine or ban subreddits, suspend accounts globally, and enact policies on hate speech or misinformation.[217] [218] This setup grants volunteers detailed control under staff oversight, with about 60,000 active mods as of December 2023.[219] Critics argue volunteer dependence causes uneven enforcement, often due to mods' biases, inexperience, or lack of formal training while handling multiple subreddits.[220] Recent changes target moderator overload: from December 1, 2025, those moderating five or more subreddits averaging over 100,000 visitors will lose excess roles to encourage focused management.[221] These build on efforts to sustain volunteers across over 138,000 active subreddits, prioritizing sustainability over full professionalization.[66]Cultural Traditions and User Behaviors
Most Reddit users lurk, consuming content without posting or commenting. Estimates indicate about 99% lurk while 1% actively contribute, often due to introversion, fear of judgment, or feeling they add little value.[222] This creates a culture favoring observation, where active users—a vocal minority—shape community dynamics through upvotes and downvotes. Karma, earned from net upvotes on posts and comments, gauges contribution quality and reputation, encouraging engaging content since its early days. Yet it invites criticism for enabling manipulation, like karma farming via reposts or low-effort posts, which may lower site quality.[80] Subreddits commonly set karma thresholds for posting or commenting, hindering newcomers while aiding spam control and entrenching veterans.[223] Cultural traditions encompass "Ask Me Anything" (AMA) sessions in subreddits like r/IAmA, where verified figures host Q&As with users since the late 2000s, promoting unfiltered exchanges that yield candid, perception-shaping responses. Coordinated voting campaigns mark another trait, as in the 2007 "Mr. Splashy Pants" effort: Redditors named a Greenpeace-tracked humpback whale humorously, claiming 78% of 150,000 votes over serious alternatives.[92][224] This showcased Reddit's upvote-driven collective subversion, predating later poll takeovers. Reddit has significantly influenced meme culture, serving as an incubator for viral formats that permeate broader internet discourse, with early examples emerging from subreddit discussions and image macros in the 2000s. Reflecting its core design and cultural emphasis on privacy and freer expression, Reddit is predominantly pseudonymous, with users creating creative, random, funny, or unrelated usernames rather than real or business names; rare exceptions include individuals using real names for accountability, professional branding, or in specific subreddits, as well as official brand accounts.[225] Users frequently employ throwaway accounts for anonymity in sensitive topics and append "tl;dr" summaries to long posts, streamlining readability in a fast-scrolling environment. These behaviors reinforce a meritocratic ethos where content rises or falls based on communal judgment, though critics argue it amplifies echo chambers by rewarding conformity over dissent.[226][227] While Reddit hosts specialized communities for niche advice, such as r/footballstrategy for football tactics, user-generated content in these subreddits varies in quality and often lacks context about specific users' circumstances, including team schemes, athletic traits, or individual needs. For high school football position advice, these discussions emphasize consulting coaches as the authoritative source, noting the absence of universal guidelines due to diverse systems and coaching styles, rendering Reddit unreliable as a primary source for such personalized recommendations.[228]Sociopolitical Role and Activism
User-Led Campaigns and Mobilization
Reddit users have coordinated campaigns using the platform's voting and community structures to influence external events. In November 2007, they rallied to vote for "Mr. Splashy Pants" in Greenpeace's humpback whale naming contest, a satirical entry that won despite the organization's preference for serious names through coordinated upvotes and subreddit promotion.[229][230] This viral, user-driven hijacking raised awareness for whale conservation in a humorous manner unintended by Greenpeace.[231] In political activism, Reddit protested the proposed Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) and [PROTECT IP Act](/page/PROTECT_IP Act) (PIPA). On January 18, 2012, it blacked out for 12 hours from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Eastern Time, replacing content with resources explaining the bills' risks to internet freedom, alongside actions by other platforms.[232] The user-backed shutdown spurred public opposition, prompting several lawmakers to withdraw support and leading to indefinite postponement of both bills.[233][234] More recently, moderators and users opposed Reddit's June 2023 paid API access policy, which threatened third-party apps. Over 7,000 subreddits went private or "dark" from June 12, restricting access to protest fees that hit volunteer tools for moderation and accessibility.[235][236] Though participation was widespread, the protest did not reverse the policy, causing permanent subreddit closures, user migrations to alternatives, site outages, and highlighting limits of user influence against corporate decisions.[237]Political Bias in Communities and Moderation
Reddit's political communities skew toward left-leaning views, reflecting its user base of mostly young, self-identified liberals or Democrats.[238][239] In large subreddits like r/politics, with millions of subscribers, progressive perspectives dominate discussions, often downvoting conservative arguments via voting mechanics.[240] Volunteer moderators, selected through community processes that favor ideologically aligned participants, apply subreddit rules with discretion shaped by their views, leading to elevated removal rates for opposing content.[241] An October 2024 University of Michigan study, using natural language processing and network analysis, showed moderators remove dissenting comments—those countering the subreddit's leanings—at significantly higher rates, reinforcing ideological silos.[242][239] This pattern emerges from inconsistent enforcement of ambiguous policies on harassment, hate speech, and misinformation, with conservative posts in left-dominated spaces facing greater scrutiny than aligned ones.[240] Reddit has banned extreme subreddits across ideologies, including r/The_Donald (pro-Trump community with ~790,000 subscribers) on June 29, 2020, for repeated abusive conduct and threats, and r/ChapoTrapHouse (left-wing "dirtbag left" forum) the same day amid a purge of over 2,000 violating communities.[243] In mainstream political subreddits, however, imbalances continue: conservative users often face removals or auto-bans for views deemed "bigoted" by left-leaning moderators, while comparable progressive rhetoric sees less action.[244] These dynamics stem from volunteer moderation's self-reinforcing nature, where homogeneous applicant pools sustain inconsistent rule application.[239]Influence on Broader Discourse and Misinformation Spread
Reddit's upvote-downvote mechanism favors emotionally charged content, propelling niche discussions into public awareness and mainstream media narratives. Memes from Reddit subreddits have shaped U.S. political discourse via "meme logic"—viral jokes, rumors, and stories impacting policy debates and public opinion.[245] Such memes drove rapid engagement in 2024 presidential debate discussions, blending humor with ideological framing to deepen partisan divides.[246] High-profile AMAs, like Barack Obama's 2012 session, have enabled politicians to engage users directly, seeding talking points echoed in national media.[247] Reddit's subreddit structure fosters echo chambers that normalize viewpoints and export them via cross-posting to social media and news outlets. A September 2024 analysis of top 100 posts found 99.1% left-wing bias (112 times more pro-left than pro-right content), skewing aggregated feeds like r/all and external coverage.[248] This amplification influences cultural trends, with Reddit memes and threads often preceding mainstream adoption and shifting sentiment on finance (e.g., r/wallstreetbets' challenge to Wall Street norms) and elections, where subreddits act as battlegrounds for voter narratives.[249][250] Regarding misinformation, Reddit's anonymity and algorithmic focus on engaging content enable fast spread of unverified claims, especially in ideologically uniform communities. During the COVID-19 pandemic, subreddits propagated misinformation on vaccine efficacy and origins, including unproven cures and myths that gained traction through user interactions before moderation.[251][252] Vaccine-skeptical threads drove sentiment-based shares, contributing to an "infodemic" extending beyond the platform.[253] QAnon content persisted via user debates, with adherents shifting subreddits after quarantines.[254][255] Responses feature community-driven fact-checking that elevates verified claims, alongside bans for major offenders.[256] In September 2021, Reddit revised policies against COVID-19 denialism and disinformation, removing subreddits with unmoderated conspiracy material. Critics contend uneven enforcement stifles grounded dissent, such as early lab-leak ideas deemed misinformation, and highlight how pseudonymity promotes sensationalism over verification.[255] Studies tie Reddit misinformation to greater toxicity and polarization through uncivil political exchanges.[257] Though moderators in subs like r/coronavirus refute falsehoods, the platform's scale—1.2 billion monthly users by 2024—lets viral untruths outrun corrections, lodging errors in collective memory before wider discourse integrates them.[258][259]Controversies and Criticisms
Content Bans and Enforcement Disparities
Reddit's content policies prohibit communities and users that promote hate based on identity or vulnerability, as well as harassment, threats of violence, and doxxing, with violations leading to subreddit quarantines or bans.[260] In June 2020, Reddit updated its policy to explicitly ban such content, removing approximately 2,000 subreddits—mostly inactive—and targeting active ones like r/The_Donald for repeated harassment and incitement despite moderator efforts.[260] [38] This action also banned r/ChapoTrapHouse, a left-leaning community, for glorifying violence, showing enforcement across political extremes.[38] Prior actions included a 2015 policy banning subreddits with involuntary pornography and harassment, leading to removals of communities like r/fatpeoplehate and r/CoonTown for targeted abuse.[261] Quarantines, a milder option limiting visibility and requiring warnings, were applied to r/The_Donald in 2019 before its ban to reduce hate speech without deletion.[262] By 2025, enforcement extended to users, warning accounts that upvoted multiple banned violent posts in short periods, with escalations for repeats.[263] Critics argue enforcement shows disparities, with right-leaning subreddits receiving stricter scrutiny under subjective rules, raising claims of left-wing bias in decisions.[264] For example, r/The_Donald's ban cited violations, yet similar rhetoric in left-leaning spaces like r/politics evades site-wide action, depending on subreddit-level moderation.[240] Volunteer moderators in aligned communities often remove dissent selectively, with minimal admin oversight, fostering echo chambers via uneven application.[240] [265] Studies on deplatforming events like the 2020 ban wave indicate short-term toxicity reductions but migrations to alternative platforms, without resolving inconsistent enforcement across ideologies.[266] Trackers in communities like r/WatchRedditDie highlight political motivations in bans and quarantines, especially post-2015, with right-leaning groups disproportionately affected relative to content volume.[267] Reddit maintains actions target policy breaches, not ideology; however, decentralized admin and moderator discretion allows variability, prompting calls for transparent criteria.[268]Allegations of Ideological Censorship
Conservative users and commentators have persistently alleged ideological censorship on Reddit, claiming moderation disproportionately targets right-leaning content while tolerating equivalent or more extreme left-leaning expressions. Critics contend that vague policies, enforced by volunteer moderators with progressive leanings, enable selective removals, quarantines, and bans that suppress dissenting views on immigration, gender, and election integrity. For example, in June 2020, administrators banned r/The_Donald—a subreddit with about 790,000 subscribers supporting then-President Donald Trump—for repeated violations of rules against harassment, vote manipulation, and incitement to violence.[269] [270] This occurred during a purge of over 2,000 subreddits for hate speech and abuse, after policy updates amid scrutiny following the George Floyd protests.[243] Claims of inconsistent enforcement intensified, as r/The_Donald's shutdown for brigading and doxxing contrasted with similar behaviors in left-leaning communities and Chinese-language subreddits critical of the Chinese Communist Party—evidence, detractors argued, of targeting conservative hubs.[271] Examples include:| Subreddit | Action | Date | Reason |
|---|---|---|---|
| r/ChapoTrapHouse | Banned | June 2020 | Glorifying violence |
| r/GenZedong | Quarantined | March 2022 | Containing a high volume of unsupported information.[272] |
| r/chonglangTV | Banned | March 2022 | Doxxing personal information.[273] |
| r/CLTV | Banned | May 2022 | Doxxing and hateful conduct.[274] |
| r/real_China_irl | Banned | October 2024 | Descending into anarchy and violating platform policies.[275] |
| r/TheDeprogram | Banned | September 2025 | Violating content policies.[276] |
Antisemitism
Following the October 7, 2023, Hamas attack on Israel, Reddit experienced spikes in antisemitic content—including slurs, blood libel tropes, and conspiracy theories—in Jewish-related subreddits.[280] Moderators handled about 50 such posts and 1,400 comments daily, leading to burnout from inadequate administrative support.[280] In response, Reddit partnered with the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), removed over 68,000 hate items between July and December 2023, updated hate speech policies, trained staff on safety, and added Jewish representatives to partner programs.[280] [281] Yet a July 2025 ADL report noted persistent issues, with around 6,000 posts on a Boulder firebombing and 4,000 on a Washington, D.C., shooting filled with "false flag" theories denying antisemitic motives.[282]Privacy Breaches, Data Practices, and Security Incidents
Reddit collects extensive user data, including usernames, email addresses, IP addresses, device information, browsing behavior, and posted content, stored indefinitely unless accounts or posts are deleted. Emails remain private, accessible only to owners and administrators, unlike public usernames, posts, comments, karma, and profile details, per Reddit's privacy policy.[283] This data enables personalized feeds, advertising targeting, and recommendations; non-public portions are shared only under limited conditions, such as legal requests or service provider agreements. On June 14–18, 2018, an attacker used compromised employee credentials on third-party cloud and code-hosting providers to access internal systems. The breach exposed current email addresses for an undisclosed number of users and a 2007 database backup with usernames and salted MD5 password hashes (replaced by bcrypt in 2009). Active passwords, credit card data, and private messages were unaffected. Reddit disclosed the incident on August 1, 2018, after remediation, recommending password resets and two-factor authentication; no widespread compromises occurred afterward.[284] [285] From late 2022 to January 2023, a phishing campaign spoofing a website targeted employees, granting access to internal tools, source code repositories, and dashboards. This exposed employee names, emails, and non-sensitive data but not user databases, passwords, or subreddit content. Reddit detected the breach on January 30, 2023, revoked access, and announced it publicly on February 9, 2023, blaming social engineering over technical flaws. Leaked code led to internal exploit reviews, but none surfaced publicly.[286] [287] Since its March 2024 initial public offering, Reddit has monetized user-generated content through licensing deals with AI firms, including a $60 million annual agreement with Google and partnerships with OpenAI. These allow use of public posts to train large language models without per-user consent, though users can opt out via settings. Critics, including privacy advocates, argue this erodes autonomy by commodifying posts meant for discussion into opaque AI applications, potentially amplifying biases or enabling surveillance without contributor compensation or control. Reddit's policy holds that public content lacks privacy expectations, but enforcement against unauthorized scraping remained inconsistent until post-IPO restrictions, enabling widespread bot and firm extraction. In October 2025, Reddit sued aggregators like Perplexity for circumventing anti-scraping measures via proxies and intermediaries, alleging Computer Fraud and Abuse Act violations and trespass; defendants contend public data accessibility negates these claims.[288] [289] [59] As of October 2025, Reddit has faced no other confirmed large-scale user data breaches, but recurring staff phishing and reliance on volunteer moderators lacking formal security training heighten indirect privacy risks, such as leaked moderation logs or doxxing from cross-referenced public profiles. Post-2023 enhancements include mandatory multi-factor authentication for employees and AI-driven anomaly detection, yet user data stays vulnerable to external scraping; billions of posts were illicitly archived in datasets like Common Crawl before 2023 API controls tightened.[290]Economic Disputes: API Pricing and Third-Party Impacts
In late May 2023, Reddit announced changes to its API access policy, shifting from mostly free usage for third-party developers to a paid model for high-volume apps, due to unsustainable costs in the double-digit millions annually.[291] The company cited the API data's growing value, especially for AI training by language model firms, and argued monetization matched industry norms to offset infrastructure expenses.[47] From July 1, 2023, pricing set $0.24 per 1,000 API calls beyond free limits, equating to about $1 per user monthly for typical use.[291][292] These changes hit third-party apps hardest, as they depended on Reddit data for advanced moderation, alternative interfaces, and accessibility features absent from the official app.[293][294] The popular iOS client Apollo, serving millions monthly, faced $20 million yearly costs from 7-8 billion API calls, outstripping its subscription revenue. Developer Christian Selig shut it down June 30, 2023, deeming fees unviable for independents.[295] Other clients like Reddit is Fun for Android, plus moderator, researcher, and bot tools, suffered similar disruptions, affecting niche communities reliant on custom access.[167] The policy triggered backlash, including subreddit blackouts from June 12, 2023, where thousands of communities—such as r/videos and r/science with millions of subscribers—went private to protest threats to volunteer ecosystems.[48] Moderators claimed it favored short-term revenue over user retention, innovation, and accessibility, while Reddit insisted fees curbed freeloading on data amid AI growth.[296] Some protests lasted beyond 48 hours; users saw it clashing with Reddit's roots, but leaders like CEO Steve Huffman stood firm, treating third-party apps as ad revenue rivals.[47] By mid-2023, most third-party apps had shut down, shifting users to Reddit's official interface and boosting its engagement, though alienating power users and moderators.[167] Some communities migrated to alternatives like Discord or federated platforms, but traffic recovered quickly, highlighting the platform's network effects. The changes underscored tensions between pre-IPO commercialization and reliance on unpaid labor, with critics faulting executives for prioritizing AI licensing over community tools.[297]See Also
Further Reading
- ''Without Their Permission: The Story of Reddit and a Blueprint for How to Change the World'' by Alexis Ohanian (2012)
- ''Understanding Reddit'' by Elliot T. Panek (2024)
- ''We Are the Nerds: The Birth and Tumultuous Life of Reddit, the Internet's Culture Laboratory'' by Christine Lagorio-Chafkin (2019)
References
- https://handwiki.org/wiki/2023_Reddit_API_controversy
