7 – Breaking News & Latest Updates 2026
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Reddit

Reddit was founded in 2005 by Steve Huffman, Aaron Swartz, and Alexis Ohanian. Since then, it has become one of the largest and liveliest social platforms on the internet. Without Reddit, we might never have AMAs. It’s not quite as mainstream as platforms like Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, or TikTok, but Reddit’s seemingly infinite supply of communities — known as subreddits — has made it one of the web’s best sources of information and conversation. But Reddit has also been a magnet for controversy: Redditors have used the platform to spread misinformation and coordinate harassment, and it has been a source of illegal and problematic content for years. In 2023, Reddit brought more controversy on itself, announcing new plans to charge for its API that led to Apollo and other third-party apps shutting down along with a mass protest from users. And of course, like so many other things, the whole fight seemed to happen on Reddit.

Reddit’s Female Dating Strategy offers women advice — and a strict rulebook for how to act

Memes, dating tips, and a judgmental look at women’s behavior

Erin Taylor
Gamergate comes to the classroom

Students used to be blank slates — now they arrive with agendas

Megan Farokhmanesh
Welcome to Lower Duck Pond, a fake town of 82,000 people

How Redditors built a town full of impostors

Cian Maher
Andrew Yang is the candidate for the end of the world

He’s a fringe presidential hopeful who thinks automation is the country’s greatest threat — and the answer is to give every American human $1,000 a month

Russell Brandom
Reddit’s QAnon ban points to how it’s tracking toxic communities

Contain a virus, and it doesn’t spread

Bijan Stephen