After 13 years, I had quit reddit 1st June 2023. At the time I joined beehaw (lemmy.world didn't exist) and used the redact utility to delete all my posts/comments (we could at the time delete instead of mass editing.
I lurk sometimes some niche communities or go on reddit from google search, I never comment or upvote. I sometimes click on my user to see there was no comments/saved/etc.
Yesterday, randomly, I clicked on my username and saw all my 2023 and less post, 13 years of comments, I was like WTF, after 2 years, reddit decided to take an old backup or something and undelete all my comments!!!
That's pretty bold even for a greedy social media sell-out. Glad you found the right tool to counteract, though whether they're really deleted still remains to be seen.
So it’s also really easy to get banned from Reddit. Just suggest that Elon musk is a criminal and should be tried for his crimes and hopefully executed.
When I left Reddit I used the tool to change all my comments to "u/Spez is a fucking loser", then once all changed I used it to mass delete, then deleted my account.
I just checked and none of my comments resurfaced. Though maybe my contribution to Reddit was just not important in any useful way.
They have backups. Even if your old comments and posts stop resurrecting and permanently become invisible to the web, Reddit can do what they please with their backups, including selling them to AI companies. It stops the scrapers, sure, but then Reddit wants the scrapers to stop as well.
GDPR removal requests are worth a try, but they technically only cover personally identifying information, so you'd have to make a strong case that your comments in whole or in part could be tied back to your real self. And they could get around most of the edge cases there if they were to anonymise that information further, such as by disconnecting each of your comments from any commonality.
This is part of the reason I never bothered to delete anything over there. No point closing that stable door. Those horses are long gone.
US companies must comply if they serve European customers. Reddit may make you try to prove you are European and deny it.
I believe under the CCPA which is a California law that is also strong and would also require them removing your data. It might apply to them even if you don’t reside in California since that is where they are based.
I deleted all of my comments years ago, but kept my account because of one subreddit. I just looked and all of my posts have been restored. I just downloaded Redact and started deleting again. On edit: I wish I saw the link to the tool you used before I rushed off to check my Reddit account. I'm unimpressed with Redact.
It was naïve to believe they'd honour a delete in the first place. Maybe early reddit did, but it would have quickly become apparent that the deleted comments tend to be more interesting ones, so they could hold on to that more interesting data by just setting a "deleted" flag in the db, or maybe moving deleted comments to a different table for optimization reasons.
Same thing with edits. Instead of replacing the old comment with the edited one, just have the edited one be a new comment while the old one is just hidden now.
Can't say I'm surprised that try undid all of that when the intent was to lower reddit's value by removing helpful comments. It wouldn't surprise me if they stop even pretending to go along with edits and deletions. It's out of your hands now and always was from the moment the comment was made.
Same thing with lemmy btw, though through a different mechanism: federation. Anyone can clone all of your activity by just creating a federated instance running custom code that handles deletions and edits differently. I'd be very surprised if no one is already doing this. Federation makes censorship and community control harder but the cost is privacy and control of your own content. The fediverse won't sell out to AI trainers because those entities can just grab the data for free. If there's something you don't want known, the only way to do it is to not post it in the first place. Trying to delete or edit it will probably just mark it as more likely to be interesting.
god damn, that is dirty. i redacted my comments the same way on different accounts when I was done with them. I'll need to be paying closer attention to them.
gross that they'll just do this. they don't know why I buried my accounts, no consideration if undeleting people's posts is safe for them. Are they doing it so companies training LLM's on reddit have access to more text?
Thanks for reminding me, I've been meaning to do this. I'm doing random text edit of them all now. I'll go back later and have it edit my top comments to a nice site-ban-worthy message.
I believe that useful knowledge should be open and accessible to everyone for any reason (within reason of course, you might want to keep some things private), so I’m against your decision, but in the end you’re the owner of what you create so it’s your decision
You might answer "who asked?" and you would be right haha