It's interesting that the users that create the data get nothing.
Imagine a future where you can just store a reoccuring prompt along the lines of: Hey Jarvis, search and give me a summary of the top things from the last 12 hours in all the topics and sites I'm interested in. Make its length about 5 mins of my reading speed. I'll prompt you for more details if I want to go deeper on any one thing.
That seems like the sort of thing that would be pretty compelling. So it follows logically from that that people have to figure out some sort of licensing or new revenue model to replace the fact that people are going to be reading LLM outputs like that rather than viewing ads on your current webpage.
Many/most of the moderators of popular subreddits are using 3rd party tools to do their moderation as the 1st party tooling for it is terrible.
My understanding is that this will cause moderators to have to begin paying for their API usage, which many moderators of popular subreddits are unsurprisingly angry about and are threatening to close/make-private their subreddit when this change occurs.
It is perhaps reasonable for Reddit to want users who are skipping their ads via 3rd party tools to have to pay to do so, but it is unreasonable to expects subreddit moderators to have to pay to donate their services to Reddit.
I'm not saying it's a great deal but it's just not money that brings value.