Without a date or any way to source the comment, it could be something from 2-3 years ago.
Obviously it's not in this case, but it's a very real issue on reddit (in fact there was a post recently) of people debating topics that were being reposted by bots from several years ago. Basically it lets people dredge up old, already talked about topics without bringing any recent relevance to the topic.
Is this new to post-blackout reddit is or has it been this way for a while. Top post of r/all is a tweet from like 2 years ago about a "current event" that no one has talked about since then and 100% of the comments are talking about this like this topic is the focus of today's or any recent time's 24 hour news cycle. Nearly 30K...
Part of me feels like it's the subreddits fault. There should've been rules against articles/tweets that aren't timestamped. Specifically for reason of ensuring relevance
This was definitely a thing long before the blackout
Doesn't that just depend on whether or not the people maintaining are happy with the flatpak experience? If they're not, they'd probably keep maintaining their packages.
Fuck Reddit u̶p̶v̶o̶t̶e̶ boost party! (kbin.social) en
The apps have all gone offline, welcome aboard to all the other refugees, fuck /u/spez!
They stole the internet from the people and we have to take it back (media.kbin.social) en
Top of r/all (old.reddit.com)
Is this new to post-blackout reddit is or has it been this way for a while. Top post of r/all is a tweet from like 2 years ago about a "current event" that no one has talked about since then and 100% of the comments are talking about this like this topic is the focus of today's or any recent time's 24 hour news cycle. Nearly 30K...
Call to action - renewed protests starting on July 1st (reddit.com)
The latest from /r/ModCoord.
Will Flatpak and Snap replace desktop Linux native apps? (theregister.com) en
Actually, the better question is: When will they replace most desktop Linux programs?