Further information: Timeline of Reddit |
The idea and initial development of Reddit originated with then college roommates Steve Huffman and Alexis Ohanian in 2005. Huffman and Ohanian attended a lecture by programmer-entrepreneur Paul Graham in Boston, Massachusetts, during their spring break from University of Virginia.[1][2][3] After speaking with Huffman and Ohanian following the lecture, Graham invited the two to apply to his startup incubator Y Combinator.[1] Their initial idea was unsuccessful: My Mobile Menu,[4][5] which was intended to allow users to order food by SMS text messaging.[1][2] During a brainstorming session to pitch another startup, the idea was created for what Graham called the "front page of the Internet".[5] For this idea, Huffman and Ohanian were accepted in Y Combinator's first class.[1][2] Supported by the funding from Y Combinator, Huffman coded the site in Lisp[5][6] and together with Ohanian launched Reddit in June 2005.[7][8]
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.[9][10] Huffman and Ohanian sold Reddit to Condé Nast Publications, owner of Wired, on October 31, 2006, for a reported $10 million to $20 million[1][11] and the team moved to San Francisco.[12] In January 2007, Swartz was fired.[13]
Huffman and Ohanian left Reddit in 2009.[14] Huffman went on to co-found Hipmunk with Adam Goldstein, and later recruited Ohanian[15] and Slowe to his new company.[16] After Huffman and Ohanian left Reddit, Erik Martin, who joined the company as a community manager in 2008 and later became general manager is 2011, played a role in Reddit's growth.[17] VentureBeat noted that Martin was "responsible for keeping the site going" under Condé Nast's ownership.[18] Martin facilitated the purchase of Reddit Gifts and led charity initiatives.[18]
Reddit launched two different ways of advertising on the site in 2009. The company launched sponsored content[19] and a self-serve ads platform that year.[20][21]
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.[22]
On September 6, 2011, Reddit became operationally independent of Condé Nast, operating as a separate subsidiary of its parent company, Advance Publications.[23]
Reddit and other websites participated in a 12-hour sitewide blackout on January 18, 2012, in protest of the Stop Online Piracy Act.[24] In May 2012, Reddit joined the Internet Defense League, a group formed to organize future protests.[25]
Yishan Wong joined Reddit as CEO in 2012.[26] Wong resigned from Reddit in 2014, after more than two years at the company.[27] Ohanian credited Wong with leading the company as its user base grew from 35 million to 174 million.[27] Wong oversaw the company as it raised $50 million in funding and spun off as an independent company.[20] 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.[28]
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.[29] During her tenure, Reddit initiated an anti-harassment policy,[30] banned involuntary sexualization, and banned several forums that focused on bigoted content or harassment of individuals.[31]
After five years away from the company, Reddit founders Ohanian and Huffman returned to leadership roles at Reddit. Ohanian returned as the full-time executive chairman in November 2014 following Wong's resignation. Pao resigned on July 10, 2015 and Huffman returned to Reddit as the company's chief executive.[32][33] After Huffman rejoined Reddit, the returning CEO launched Reddit's iOS and Android apps, fixed Reddit's mobile website, and created A/B testing infrastructure.[1] The company launched a major redesign of its website in April 2018.[34] Huffman said new users were turned off from Reddit because it had looked like a "dystopian Craigslist".[34] Reddit also instituted several technological improvements,[35] 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,[36] and new content guidelines. These new content guidelines were aimed at banning content inciting violence and quarantining offensive material.[1][35] Slowe, the company's first employee, rejoined Reddit in 2017 as chief technology officer.[37]
Reddit's largest round of funding came in 2017, when the company raised $200 million and was valued at $1.8 billion.[38] The funding supported Reddit's site redesign and video efforts.[38]
Reddit was originally written in Common Lisp but was rewritten in Python in December 2005[39] for wider access to code libraries and greater development flexibility. The Python web framework that Swartz developed to run the site, web.py, is available as an open source project.[40] As of November 10, 2009[update], Reddit uses Pylons as its web framework.[41]
Reddit was an open source project from June 18, 2008 until September 2017.[42] During that time, all of the code and libraries written for Reddit were freely available on GitHub, with the exception of the anti-spam/cheating portions.[43]
Users can contribute to translating Reddit into 89 languages using the localization management platform Crowdin.[44]
As of November 10, 2009[update], Reddit decommissioned its own servers and migrated to Amazon Web Services.[45] Reddit uses PostgreSQL as their primary datastore and is slowly moving to Apache Cassandra, a column-oriented datastore. It uses RabbitMQ for offline processing, HAProxy for load balancing and memcached for caching. In early 2009, Reddit started using jQuery.[46]
In 2010, Reddit released its first mobile web interface for easier reading and navigating the website on touch screen devices.[47]
For several years, 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.[48] Reddit removed Alien Blue and released its official application, Reddit: The Official App, on Google Play and the iOS App Store in April 2016.[49]
The company released an app for Reddit's question-and-answer Ask Me Anything subreddit in 2014.[50] The app allowed users to see active Ask Me Anythings, receive notifications, ask questions and vote.[50]
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[34][51] and interest-based groups (called 'subreddits') were introduced in 2008.[52] 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 "Ask reddit".[52]
Reddit rolled out its multireddit feature, the site's biggest change to its front page in years, in 2013.[53] With the multireddits, users see top stories from a collection of subreddits.[53]
In 2015, Reddit enabled embedding, so users could share Reddit content on other sites.[54] 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.[55] Users still can upload images to Reddit using Imgur.[55] Reddit's in-house video uploading service for desktop and mobile launched in 2017.[56] Previously, users had to use third-party video uploading services, which Reddit acknowledged was time consuming for users.[56]
Reddit released its "spoiler tags" feature in January 2017.[57] The feature wants users of potential spoilers in posts and pixelates preview images.[57]
Reddit unveiled changes to its public front page, called r/popular, in 2017.[58] The feature creates a front page free of potentially adult-oriented content for unregistered users.[58]
In late 2017, Reddit declared it wanted to be a mobile-first site, launching several changes to its apps for iOS and Android.[59] The new features included user-to-user chat, a theater mode for viewing visual content, and mobile tools for the site's moderators.[59] "Mod mode" lets moderators manage content and their subreddits on mobile devices.[59]
Reddit launched its redesigned website in 2018, with its first major visual update in a decade.[34] Development for the new site took more than a year.[34] It was the result of an initiative by Huffman upon returning to Reddit, who said the site's outdated look deterred new users.[34] 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.[34] The goal was not only for Reddit to look nicer, but also to make it easier to accommodate a new generation of Reddit users.[34] Additionally, Reddit's growth had strained the site's back end;[60] 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.[60]