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[return to "Had a call with Reddit to discuss pricing"]
1. miki12+gN[view] [source] 2023-05-31 20:48:07
>>robbie+(OP)
This feels like it's all priced for AI companies, TBH. This per-request pricing makes a LOT more sense if you assume that one particular piece of content will only be requested once in your company's history, saved on a server somewhere and used for training forever. You're not paying for a request being processed, you're not even paying to offset any advertising cost, you're essentially paying for the ability to use the requested piece of content forever. Maybe that's what Apollo should do, set up a huge cache layer and proxy all requests for the public data through there? I feel like the power law would apply here, so 80% of the requests would be for 20% of the content. Considering how popular the most popular subreddits are, I wouldn't be surprised if the balance was something like 99-to-1. Cache misses would still need to be fetched from the API itself, but that should drive costs down massively.

If the ToS allow this, the cache layer could even be shared across apps from different developers (developers supporting both iOS and Android might have an advantage here), making the costs even lower.

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2. DrammB+qA1[view] [source] 2023-06-01 03:10:02
>>miki12+gN
As soon as there's anything mirroring reddit and allowing 3 party apps to circumvent API pricing then the ToS would be updated to disallow it.
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