best way to view old reddit content without giving them revenue?
The greatest thing about Reddit is finding information on any old topic. For today, I wanted to dig deeper into My Dinner With Andre. RIF tried to open (he's such a trooper 😢) and when that failed I went to the browser.
I really want nothing to do with supporting that site, but I do want to read these old discussions. Any advice?
uBlock Origin and uBlock extension combined give really good ad blocking alone. Combine it with a DNS solution in your router like AdGuard and you won't have to deal with ads at all.
Simultaneously gives the middle finger to reddit because they live on ads.
True, but they're going to take whatever numbers they can use to plug the IPO. So even just visiting the site lets them claim traffic hasn't fallen much.
Use Browser extensions to block all ads and trackers, don't log in to your account. As an anonymous IP visiting the site you're almost useless for them because you give them almost no data to sell to advertisers.
Works best with Firefox and uBlockOrigin and some tracker blockers like Privacy Badger. Also works on mobile since Firefox on mobile also supports extensions, however, the Reddit mobile experience is trash, whether you are in a browser or use their shitty app.
You can use the Web Archive, if those posts are saved, you'll see it without ever touching a reddit server. You can't comment or give awards or anything, but you're not locked out completely.
http://mlmym.org/ mimics old Reddit and just pulls through any Lemmy instance you're using, so you don't have to change anything you're already doing and it feels like home. if you like it, please spread it, I only found it because somebody mentioned it.
That link is only for Lemmy instances (e.g., Lemmy.world, Beehaw.org). I entered "Beehaw.org" into the field and it worked fine.
I think the previous poster thought the OP wanted a Lemmy instance but to have it look just like Old Reddit (which this does). If you want Reddit content without going to Reddit, maybe Libreddit works (I think that's the name of the site). Tedd.it i believe will.shut down on August 1, but you can try them.for now.
Bummer - doesn't work for kbin... might be something as simple as the change from /c/ in community urls on lemmy to the /m/ magazine urls on kbin. Any chance they have a github or a contributor page to report a bug? Not seeing any on the initial interface.
sorry, I'm not associated with them, was just linked this morning and stoked. More people that know the better. I hope they can patch your instance in!!
Are there? IMDb killed its boards like 10 years ago. I am unaware of other large scale movie discussion boards, Reddit has really taken that spot for me.
Whenever I finished a tv series it was nice closure to go through its subreddit and see all the takes, things I missed, etc. Old style media or just marter-of-factly summarizing the plot just doesn't go as far.
Exactly what usually do as soon as I’m caught up.
See the theories and missed connections for TV and book series.
I hope this will eventually also kick off here.
For tech news, memes and doomscrolling lemmy is already full enough for my taste, but the casual users deep in fandoms have not arrived, yet, at least not in scale.
For now, and this probably won't work forever, I'm hosting an instance of Libreddit, which is effectively an alternative front end to Reddit. In lieu of that, the Internet Archive is probably your next best bet.
Mine's still trucking somehow, but I'm not using a public instance, so maybe somehow the smaller ones are flying under the radar? Probably not, but for now I'll enjoy the fact that it's still working.
https://browse.feddit.de/ This will show you every community there is on Lemmy. It won't help with the old discussions, but may help you find some new communities you didn't know about. I find it best to either just scroll through the list as is, or if using the search bar, to type maybe half the word I'm looking for and give it a few seconds to search.