Reddit is making social sharing and embedding of its app better

from Reddit blog post today admits it “didn’t make it easy” to share content like cool conversations and memes to other social platforms – but now it’s finally doing something about it. Reddit improves link embedding for messaging apps and adds more sharing features like sharing directly to Instagram stories right from the Reddit app.

If you’ve ever tried to share a Reddit link of the official app on, say, iMessage on an iPhone, you might recall that it didn’t have a particularly content-rich preview. Now the company is improving it with a more robust visual preview of the content, the name of the subreddit, and the number of upvotes and comments it has.

The new preview for Reddit stock in iMessage.
Image: Reddit

Third-party Reddit client apps have spent years developing better ways to share content — such as how Apollo can take a threaded screenshot showing the number of replies they want — but they don’t include a link for the recipient encouraging them to visit Reddit.

The Reddit app’s new share sheet can throw content directly into an Instagram story as a still image.
Image: Reddit

Reddit’s re-prioritisation of its own app and platform is coming along well as the world looks for the next best app to use as an information channel, adding features built for Reddit’s official mobile app on iOS and Android.

Even official users of the Reddit app have gotten into the habit of just taking a screenshot of anything they want to share. But now Reddit will remind them that they can do it another way: with a pop-up notification inviting the user to share the link via the share sheet.

Reddit will poke you for continuing to take screenshots of content and help you use the new sharing features instead.
Image: Reddit

Reddit’s focus on providing richer embeds also extends to content publishing platforms such as those The edge used to bring you these articles, thanks to the release of a new one by the company include tool box (PDF). Content from other social platforms like Twitter or YouTube is often easier to embed into websites than Reddit links, but that could change.

It’s especially noteworthy that the new tools and capabilities also come just after Reddit’s recent comprehensive overhaul of how it enables outsiders to interact with its data. In a post on Reddit, the developer of Apollo called the changes “not necessary in all cases for the worse, provided Reddit is reasonable,” but said based on conversations with the company, it has no plans to offer free API access for third-party commercial apps in the future.