Itâs going to be a lot harder to pull off massive protests.
It's not like they couldn't put a stop to blackouts before, as seen with the third-party app fiasco, but Reddit has now made that tactic entirely impossible. Mods will now need to get permission from Reddit admins before they can make a sub private. Makes me wonder if they're about to do something controversial again soon.
We have a responsibility to protect Reddit and ensure its long-term health, and we cannot allow actions that deliberately cause harm.
Truly, a harm for the platform when the moderators of /r/assesgonewild take their subreddit private for a week in protest. So far up their asses.
Read: "Our users got so pissed at us that it jeopardized our IPO. Now it could actually effect something like our stock price, so fuck 'em". Seriously people, just leave
Reddit makes an anti-user change. In other news, grass is green.
I haven't been on the site in over a year and nothing since then has convinced me to go back. Maybe I'm lucky that I'm not in any Reddit-only communities, but it could also just be that I treat those communities as though they don't exist and never had a reason to join one as a result.
You know what? I don't care and I stopped reading this article after one paragraph because I found that I couldn't be bothered to go on. During the reddit exodus I was pissed off about how they would ruin something good, but I've long since lost interest in what happens on that site. Honestly I was a tiny bit surprised that it still exists. Like who the heck goes there still?
What remains as methods of protest after this? I wonder what would happen to a subreddit if it's moderators would simply stop moderating all together...
But I guess admins could always make someone a moderator, there's always someone willing to have a power trip.
Deleting your account and leaving the site. Reddit clearly doesn't care about the users, and hasn't for a very, very long time. Remaining there justifies their actions.
That wasn't just larger subs. They changed the rules for requesting a takeover of a sub, and there are hundreds of subs it affected. There are even cases of it being really dangerous, there's a shroom hunting sub that is poorly moderated and has had life-threatening advice left up.
I truly donât understand how anyone does the free work for a corporation to moderate a subreddit. Steps like this seem to treat them like employees and theyâll largely just chug along with it for⌠what? Notoriety?
I remember wanting to be a forum mod when I was like 15 and thought that it would make me cool on the forum. As a grown adult... no way. I am so busy between work, grad school, and my personal life, I have no time for such silliness. I have a lot of respect for mods that donate their own time to run communities.
I appreciate anyone working on an actual community but doing the service of not just giving free content but free curation to a corporation seems unreal. Plus, Iâm a grown adult. I donât have the time to do all that much lol
Reddit is giving its staff a lot more power over the communities on its platform. Starting today, Reddit moderators will not be able to change if their subreddit is public or private without first submitting a request to a Reddit admin.
More power by having less power. I stopped reading here. Yeah, The Verge never disappoints.Edit: My bad. The Verge was correct this time. Guess if I read the article then I would understand.
I see. Well then my bad for misunderstanding this. To me moderators are Reddit staff working for free. But I see that the word "staff" was used literally.
Oh so its now completely impossible to stop a brigade by shuttering a subreddit for a day or two without begging some pea brain Reddit stooge. That won't lead to anything putrid happening to small and medium subreddits on a regular basis I hope.