Did Reddit start blocking its subdomain-to-subreddit URL scheme?
5 comments
Recommend you use the Redirector browser plugin (https://einaregilsson.com/redirector/) and create a rule with these options:
Redirect:
https://*.reddit.com/ to:
https://old.reddit.com/r/$1 excluding:
https://old.reddit.com/ Example:
https://*.reddit.com/ → https://old.reddit.com/r/* Applies to:
Main window (address bar)
Redirect:
https://*.reddit.com/ to:
https://old.reddit.com/r/$1 excluding:
https://old.reddit.com/ Example:
https://*.reddit.com/ → https://old.reddit.com/r/* Applies to:
Main window (address bar)
They stopped doing that at least 10 years ago.
https://web.archive.org/web/20150317155232/https://news.redd...
https://web.archive.org/web/20150317155232/https://news.redd...
I sure hope they won’t take down old.reddit.com. IMHO, Reddit would be unusable without it.
Even old reddit is obsolete or breaks in some use cases. There's a new type of link that fails if you're on old reddit. Secondly most new subs and users put all their sidebar and wiki etc in the new design. So I often end up missing things. And another thing is few minor changes in submitting posts.
Old reddit is still fine for reading content though.
Old reddit is still fine for reading content though.
I never even knew they did this.
I have no idea if it was an advertised or officially supported scheme. And I don’t know what the nature of the URL redirect/rewrite/forwarding was. It was handy for remembering. Now all those links seem to redirect to the main domain.
Old.reddit still works but could go soon if they’re reorganizing schemes/standards.
I actually used that subdomain structure years ago to allow users to select different subset styles for subreddits.