• roofuskit
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    371 year ago

    Replacing the moderation teams of 5,000 subs should go really well. Right?

    • tinwhiskers
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      1 year ago

      There’s a risk that disgruntled ex-redditors will collectively vote for the most terrible people they can find for mods, just to harm reddit and drive people here. That would be truly sad to see. Truly sad.

      Edit: other appalling things I hope we don’t see are people going to reddit in down times only to upvote bad comments and posts, and downvote the good ones.

      The very last thing we would want to see is the mods of large subs switching between private and public mode too often, because that apparently has to change permissions on all the posts in the sub, and was why reddit had downtime when they all went dark. They may even have the wild and outrageous idea to briefly turn off private simultaneously, only to go back private as a form of malicious compliance with Huffman’s warnings.

      • @[email protected]
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        131 year ago

        re: the second part, that’s still engagement and Reddit doesn’t care so long as the metrics are looking good. You’re better off not interacting

        • @[email protected]
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          61 year ago

          Yeah, the way Musk bragged about engagement while he burned down Twitter made me wary of even loading Reddit now. No way am I giving that shithead spez the satisfaction to see some, any line go up, if it does anyway it won‘t be because of me.

      • @[email protected]
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        111 year ago

        Dude, like no person with self worth will apply to being a mod at reddit after such a move. It will be a really good social experiment, some social science student will make a decent thesis out of it.