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AMAgeddon: Reddit Mods Are Locking Up the Site's Most Popular Pages In Protest 385

vivaoporto writes: As reported by CNET and TechCrunch, reddit moderators are locking up the site's most popular pages in protest against the dismissal of Victoria Taylor, a key member of the site's behind-the-scenes team. Taylor, who was the main facilitator for the site's question-and-answer community "Ask Me Anything" (graced by the presence of notables like Barack Obama, Jerry Seinfeld and regular folks like a line cook at Applebee's) was fired yesterday, causing all sorts of problems for Reddit's most mainstream offering.

Taylor's reported departure, which has been dubbed AMAgeddon, led other moderators of the marquee IAmA subreddit to switch the page's settings to private, rendering the Reddit userbase unable to view the page. Since then, dozens of other subreddits including /r/askreddit, /r/videos, /r/gaming and /r/gadgets — each with several million subscribers — have also been made private, instead re-directing readers to a static landing page.

Reddit's cofounder and executive chairman, Alexis Ohanian, said in a post, "we don't talk about specific employees. (...) We get that losing Victoria has a significant impact on the way you manage your community, (...) I'd really like to understand how we can help solve these problems, because I know r/IAMA thrived before her and will thrive after." He later apologized for how communication was handled. A full recap of the situation is available at the site itself, with insights from redditors about the whole situation.

This comes in the wake of other highly controversial events like the response to what became known as The Fappening, and the more recent ban of the controversial but popular FatPeopleHate subreddit.
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AMAgeddon: Reddit Mods Are Locking Up the Site's Most Popular Pages In Protest

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  • by Kunedog ( 1033226 ) on Friday July 03, 2015 @08:58AM (#50038779)
    One of the many reasons mods are upset is that the employee who was fired was (by all accounts) crucial to the reliability and credibility of AMAs.

    https://archive.is/ppes2 [archive.is]

    The admins didn't realize how much we rely on Victoria. Part of it is proof, of course: we know it's legitimate when she's sitting right there next to the person and can make them provide proof. We've had situations where agents or others have tried to do an AMA as their client, and Victoria shut that shit down immediately. We can't do that anymore.

    Chooter didn't allow anyone to do fake third-party AMAs, nor did she allow anyone to pay money to do an AMA. She practiced what she preached:
    http://blog.prspeak.com/blog/p... [prspeak.com]

    My comment from Reddit's banfest [slashdot.org] a few weeks ago:

    Reddit has unbelievable traffic and reach, so stuff that earns popularity there gets spread to virtually everywhere and everyone.

    It's exposure that marketers (of anything: products, politics, whatever) would kill for. They want to buy their way in, but not if some dirty peasant can tell the truth and (through sheer merit) get voted up and be taken just as seriously (or more seriously) than their bought & paid for message.

    So Reddit sees advertisers chomping at the bit to throw money at it, but first Reddit has to demonstrate that it can crush contrary opinions at will.

    IMO redditors are right to be suspicious that Reddit suddenly removed (without explanation) the only person whom they trust to expose fake/paid AMAs.

    No, we don't know why she was fired. But even if it was for cause, what the mods and community are most angry about is the lack of communication from admins (lots of them were left hanging for scheduled AMAs, with no word from Reddit). You see this lack of communication cited over and over again in the explanations on the subreddits made private. They say it's been a problem for years, and yesterday was just the tipping point.

    Reddit's rationalization of its recent taste for censorship is that they want to create "safe spaces" to prevent abuse, harrassment, threats, terrorism, earthquakes, etc. But that is clearly a lie because they never provide evidence of such harrassment and they allow much worse subreddits like SRS to exist, and many other subreddits have been banned since FPH without even the pretense of a "harrassment" excuse, and there are other examples of uneven enforcement (e.g. the admins told KiA (the Gamergate subreddit) that they can't post public company contact info, which appears to be a "rule" unique to KiA).

    Saying the wrong thing (especially criticism of Pao) can easily get you shadowbanned, which means you can see your own posts but no one else can see them. This feature can only be used by admins (not mods), and its only legitimate use was against spammers and bots, but even that's no longer the case because tech-savvy users (e.g. spammers) know how to test for it. Now it's just a sneaky way they censor with the hope of avoiding a confrontation and backlash.

    Of course none of these unique and secret and biased rules and enforcement policies have been communicated to the community or mods either. This is almost always the real root cause behind every Reddit leadership fuckup with corresponding mod/user uprising, and this time even they and their friends in the corrupt, colluding tech news media--you know, the ones who hailed Pao as a hero of women for her frivilous failed lawsuit--can't hope to spin this user/mod revolt into a "redditor harrassment" narrative. It all started over Reddit's firing of a universally-beloved female employee, for fuck's sake. Redditors would trade

    • by Anonymous Coward on Friday July 03, 2015 @09:13AM (#50038833)

      Dig 2.0 all over again.
      What these companies seem to fail to understand is that by having "the community" do their work for them without pay, they lose any kind of hold on the site and the community.
      The mods have nothing to lose by fucking up you site if you mess with them. They can move to a new site tomorrow.
      Maybe if being a mod was a payed job you could tell them what to do.

      • Indeed (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Kunedog ( 1033226 ) on Friday July 03, 2015 @09:24AM (#50038885)
        Put another way: If the Reddit leadership wants the mods' valuable labor to remain free as in beer, then they'd better allow it to remain free as in speech.
        • Re:Indeed (Score:4, Insightful)

          by thaiceman ( 2564009 ) on Friday July 03, 2015 @11:08AM (#50039397)

          For all the shitty things you will see on 4chan the one thing that remains constant is it is more or less uncensored free speech, with that freedom comes trolls, with it comes some things most people will not like (there is a reason it is known as the asshole of the internet) but at the same time there are some really intelligent people there.

          Some of the most stimulating tech conversations I have had in my life have been on 4chan of all places and lasted the better part of 3 days and numerous threads, at the same time you've got things like the fappening & the hate threads for all shapes sizes and colors. Its humanity uncensored, its something that more and more you don't see because the world has turned into a politically correct, watered down version of a PBS kids morning show...

          • by Anrego ( 830717 ) *

            Indeed.

            I've been involved in some really amazing discussions on 4chan, and honestly if you avoid /b/ and a few others, the other boards tend to be surprisingly sane.

            There's some serious gold under the shit, and it's very cathartic to speak freely with effectively no consequence to yourself (or even an online identity). You can say the most hatefully insane thing you've ever wanted to say in one post, and then immediately make some comment with no connection between the two.

            • There's some serious gold under the shit, and it's very cathartic to speak freely with effectively no consequence to yourself (or even an online identity).

              You can come up with a throwaway identity on almost any site. Very few take any real steps to verify your identity. That's not special. Reddit just seems to lack any sphincter control. When people act like assholes, they are encouraged rather than discouraged. So yeah, there's some gems under the turds, but mostly it's just a big fat circle jerk. It's not like Slashdot is so wonderful; Since Dice took over it's mostly been a big whine-fest since they keep shitting on it. But don't act like reddit is some pa

      • What these companies seem to fail to understand is that by having "the community" do their work for them without pay, they lose any kind of hold on the site and the community.

        What they fail to understand and when they fail to understand it is that the community doesn't give a shit about them and right away. The community just wants a host to infest.

      • Come on, I see this all the time, Reddit now must be 1000 times bigger than Digg ever was at it's peak. The reason I remember leaving Digg was the fact they had switched to a more populist model, something Reddit did Loooooong ago.
      • by meta-monkey ( 321000 ) on Friday July 03, 2015 @10:19AM (#50039119) Journal
        And people have loyalty to the mods and the other posters on the sub, not the admins. If the mods of /r/IAmA or /r/AskScience said "fuck it, we're going to voat," lots and lots of people would go with them.
        • I feel like there's something wrong with a community when people start having loyalty to the mods. A mod should be there mainly to filter spam, and to a lesser extent trolls. They aren't there to guide the conversation and gain loyalty.
    • I am hearing that several subreddits that went private were forcibly reopened by the admins, and the mods were unable to do anything about it after. I don't have sources, but if it's discovered that it true, that would be the final nail in the coffin for me. The Reddit administration is interested in one thing, and one thing only right now: Milking the site for as much money as possible, as quickly as possible, and fuck the users. Well, fuck them then, as a user. We'll see if they can make their sweet cash when no one wants to use their site anymore.
      • Digg was worth $160 million once. Sold for $500,000.
      • The Reddit administration is interested in one thing, and one thing only right now: Milking the site for as much money as possible, as quickly as possible, and fuck the users.

        How do you differentiate between that and a site that wants to remain open for it's users despite the actions of few?

      • by DRJlaw ( 946416 )

        I am hearing that several subreddits that went private were forcibly reopened by the admins, and the mods were unable to do anything about it after. I don't have sources, but if it's discovered that it true, that would be the final nail in the coffin for me.

        I hear you. It sucks when someone decides to take their ball and go home only to be reminded that it's not their ball. It sucks even more when you support that someone only to be reminded that it's not your ball or your home, and that both of you are v

      • Reddit, so far, is living on investors money... their last published revenue from advertisement was $8.3M in 2014, of which they gave 10% to charity. In 2013, they operated in the red... as far as I know, they also operated in the red in 2014. In the last funding round (Oct 2014?), they were valued $500M and got $50M in extra funding. 6 times their annual advertisement revenue...

        News at 11, reddit is a company and needs to produce money to stay afloat. Do you know what happens when an overvalued company runs out of investors while still not operating in the black?

        • Yeah, but you want to know the fastest way to run yourself out of investors AND drive yourself into the red? Hint: It included hare-brained monetization schemes and pissing off your users enough that you drive a large number of them off your service (or even just piss them off enough to jump ship once your next competitor starts to make a surge, with something as easily replicated as Reddit). Without users, internet companies are worthless. This is what I don't understand about a lot of monetization sch
    • Re: (Score:2, Troll)

      by DerekLyons ( 302214 )

      Reddit has unbelievable traffic and reach, so stuff that earns popularity there gets spread to virtually everywhere and everyone.

      [Remainder of tinfoil hat rant snipped]

      That's what the Reddit hivemind thinks... In reality, not so much. Reddit only makes the news when it's on fire, again.

      • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

        by Anonymous Coward

        8+ million users with accounts. 12 million unique ip's a month.

        400k unique ip's a month for slashdot...

        • by DG ( 989 )

          8+ million users with accounts. 12 million unique ip's a month.

          400k unique ip's a month for slashdot...

          Well I for one am coming back here...

        • That means Reddit as a whole is popular (and fairly large) but popularity != influence.

          Especially when you consider that even the largest subreddit is but a fraction of that traffic - much of the traffic is spread across thousands of subreddits (many of them quite small, even though they're popular among their habitues). It's essentially a collection of independent websites (though bound by a common interface and portal) ranging from fairly small (in terms of the overall web) to infinitesimally tiny.

          Looking at this list [reddit.com] of subreddits that have gone dark is instructive. Relatively few break the 100k subscribers mark, most are under 10k. And unless Reddit is very unusual in it's counting, the number of subscribers is a significant multiple of the number of active users.

    • by 0100010001010011 ( 652467 ) on Friday July 03, 2015 @10:13AM (#50039089)
      • Fark's "You'll get over it"
      • Slashdot's buyout by Dice.
      • Digg 4.0
      • Reddit Pao-Pao-Paower Fail.
      • Myspace's Myspaceness
      • Facebook's "We'll let everyone sign up!"

        It's happened before, it'll happen again.

        The people that have historically been on reddit were a 'techy' or 'nerdy' minority. They were who Slashdotters were 20 years ago. They want to attract bored housewives and people not currently on reddit and they'll never do it with fat people hate or other people having full control of subreddits or big things like Secret Santa, so they got rid of everyone that disagrees. Victoria actually made celebrities do their own AMA. Now they can just have the PR firm phone it in.

        If anyone is upset at the changes then you they weren't the target demographic of Reddit 2.0. The type of people that originally came to Reddit a decade ago will find elsewhere. Reddit will continue to exist as a place for bored housewives to continue talking becoming a facebook of sorts. Right now all of those people are shoehorned into a terrible ayout of Facebook (Notice how facebook just added threaded discussion?). They're going to attract the people that want a "better" place to discuss things than Facebook but not actually have any real discussion. Why do you think CoonTown and SRS still exist? Loud vocal minority idiots are very profitable (Patreon).

        Write something in a low level, portable language. Someone on slashdot should know how to roll up Usenet, IRC, voting & a web front end into a single set of packages that anyone can host.

        Why isn't 'moderation' in a RFC yet? It's something that could probably be nailed out by now as we've tried multiple different methods.

        I personally prefer Slashdot's style of moderation for most things. (Where its limited to -2 to +5, and you have taxonomy built in). But for some things I prefer Reddit's where everyone gets a vote. Let people write their own implementations of the RFC and let anyone incorporate it into their website. Slashdot and Reddit are open source in the same way that OpenSSL was. Technically open source but such a pain in the ass to get running for most people it wasn't worth it.

        Add on Tor/I2P and you now have all of the above 'off' of the main internet.

      • by Anrego ( 830717 ) *

        Slashdot and Reddit are open source in the same way that OpenSSL was.

        Is slashdot even open source any more? Seems like at some point slashcode silently stopped being updated, and now seems very out of date.

        • by caseih ( 160668 ) on Friday July 03, 2015 @12:11PM (#50039675)

          Slashcode hasn't been open source in some time. Soylent built their site based on an older version of slashcode that was available and has modified it and improved it from there. Slashdot is built on the closed, and now completely proprietary, slashcode base.

          Please Dice, drop the silly share button and return the read more link, and the read comments link. And provide a way to turn off the video stories that get stuck inline. This is an appropriate story to remind you of this. Your money is made because of content provided for free by us.

          • by fahrbot-bot ( 874524 ) on Friday July 03, 2015 @12:43PM (#50039795)

            Please Dice, drop the silly share button and return the read more link, and the read comments link.

            Second this, but don't know why, at least, they can't all be displayed?

            BTW, I solved this, and the video stories by adding this rule to my Proxomitron config file for "slashdot.org":

            Matching expression: </head>
            Replacement Text:
            <style>
            .fhitem-poll { display: none !important; }
            .nav-social { display: none !important; }
            .popularity { display: none !important; }
            </style>
            </head>

            And killed auto audio play using:
            Matching Expression: <audio \1 autoplay="*" \2>
            Replacement Text: <audio \1 \2>

      • by Megane ( 129182 )

        I personally prefer Slashdot's style of moderation for most things. (Where its limited to -2 to +5, and you have taxonomy built in).

        But that's not why it works. It works because you only get 5 or 15 mod points at a time, you have 3 days to use them or lose them, and you only get them when you get enough micro-points (I think they're called "tokens") from normal usage such as reading threads.

        When EVERYONE can upboat and downboat EVERY post with no limit, that's when the groupthink and circle-jerks begin. Metamod helps too, but not as much as simply making mod points something that happens only once or twice a month for normal users.

    • One of the many reasons mods are upset is that the employee who was fired was (by all accounts) crucial to the reliability and credibility of AMAs.

      Pro Tip: Pay close attention anytime a manager or company says something like "employees are our most valuable asset" or "... are critical to our success" because that's what they look/sound like when they're lying to you.

  • Hm (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward

    It's a shame we can't do something similar to get some changes made on this site. Shithole that it now is.

    • Quick, where's that share button so I can share your great post with all my friends on Flopbook and Twatter...

    • "We" can write an alternative. Make a new Usenet. Integrate IRC. Add voting somehow.

      Usenet solved 30 years ago the exact problems a lot of people are having with Reddit/Voat/Slashdot. It's distributed, you can't 'take it down'. Make a new RFC and let people host their own 'sites'.

      It just needs voting/some moderation on top of it. Make it a simple, straight forward interface. If I want to spin up a 'chat, discussion, et al' website on AWS.

      I would peer a node on a discussion if someone wrote it.

      • It just needs voting/some moderation on top of it.

        So what we need is a newsreader which implements a web of trust. People sign their messages. You assign scores to people, when you do the system automagically downloads their pubkey, and their scoring file which contains pubkeys for the people they've scored. Their scores get weighted by your score for them and incorporated into your scoring system... And you could have multiple webs so you could have different experiences. Seems relatively straightforward, so the community should cook up a bodgy implementa

  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday July 03, 2015 @09:05AM (#50038811)

    Someone asked a loaded question to Jessie Jackson accusing him of nefarious mob style tactics. Victoria left the question up, in fact it was upvoted near the top. He responded without answering the question. Then she got fired.

    My speculation is that Jessie used nefarious mob style tactics to get her fired.

    • by ihtoit ( 3393327 ) on Friday July 03, 2015 @09:27AM (#50038899)

      From the OutOfTheLoop subreddit:
      "...no-one, excluding a select few of the administrative team, knows precisely why /u/chooter was removed as an admin, and that will almost certainly continue to be the case until the admins get their house in order: both parties are at being professional in that they aren't talking about the reasons why it occurred...."

      • both parties are at being professional in that they aren't talking about the reasons why it occurred...."

        Is it professional not to tell the community why you fired an admin of a community site? I don't think that it is. I think that it's half-assed and can only lead to unnecessary speculation which could be avoided by being straightforward. The only reason not to make a public announcement making the situation clear is if they're not acting in their integrity, and legal wants to sit on the announcement like it's an egg and wait for it to hatch.

    • Who knows. But I hope this turns into something really great for her. She's proven over and over again that she's a dedicated, talented, hard working employee who believed in her job, and earned the trust of the public, politicians, celebrities, everybody. I hope she has job offers pouring in.
    • by Victor Liu ( 645343 ) on Friday July 03, 2015 @10:58AM (#50039343) Homepage
      There's suggestion that this is not the case: https://pbs.twimg.com/media/CI... [twimg.com] Please do not continue to spread this rumor as it is just causing more harm.
      • by Anonymous Coward on Friday July 03, 2015 @12:53PM (#50039859)

        Here is the thing. Suddenly they have to get rid of someone and had no plans on how to replace her? I mean it would take about 10 mins to pick someone else to do that job and say 'this is your job now work with her to make sure it goes smoothly'. They did not plan it out because they did not plan on her leaving. It was a firing of passion not because she screwed up.

        If she was leaving on 'her own' then she would have said 'you need to find someone to xyz'. If they had planned for a couple of weeks to get rid of her someone would have asked 'who does her job when she is gone?'. If not that is a massive fail of management.

        No one asked those questions. Because it was 'get rid of her or I turn up the heat'. They can spin it however they like at this point. They probably can even find something to 'justify' it. But it happened too quickly for it to be a justifiable reason.

        They do not want to cave to Mr Jackson. When they are actually in a position to do so. They could literally say 'he asked us to' and it would be on him. They are helping bury the bodies. This is part and parcel for Mr Jackson. Just to be clear I am not racist. This man is an opportunist who uses race to make himself and his friends lots of cash with a shakedown racket. The black community would do a lot better without people like him. He may have started with good intentions but now it is just about the greenbacks.

        I would not be surprised to find out that somehow reddit is behind getting the new site the community was building banned from paypal.

    • by Trailer Trash ( 60756 ) on Friday July 03, 2015 @11:28AM (#50039481) Homepage

      Someone asked a loaded question to Jessie Jackson accusing him of nefarious mob style tactics.

      Bluntly stated, such a question can't possibly be "loaded". It's fully legitimate given Jackson's background and current activities.

      I was bemused that Reddit would put someone with Ellen Pao's background in to run the place, and I figured it would probably cause a lot of problems. I was correct. First she had the stupid "we're not going to negotiate your salary" stunt (whaddaya bet she negotiated *her* salary?) and now crap like this.

      Sometimes I think people miss out on the fact that these companies are ephemeral. There's literally nothing there, just a bunch of people who come together and form a community. Those people will quickly go elsewhere - ask myspace. Someone mentioned Dig and it's a good lesson for those who would learn. You can lose 99% of the value of your company in the course of a few months by making a few stupid decisions.

      • by RedK ( 112790 )

        Bluntly stated, such a question can't possibly be "loaded".

        You can judge for yourself if the question was or not loaded : http://i.imgur.com/TpNZ2jQ.jpg [imgur.com]

        Yes, that was the actual question. Didn't seem to phase Rev. Jackson who just offered a non-reply.

    • by ADRA ( 37398 )

      Yes, because you know, rampent speculation is much more interesting than just hearing it from sources. The sad thing is, the Internet has manifested MOB justice just like we had hundreds of years before from uninformed emotion driven people. How many corpses will the internet leave in its wake before people can act sensibly? Oh well, good luck with -whatever new site- you depend on to spring up and be your nmew sounding board. But hell, it'll go the same way as this one beacuse people too busy tearing down

  • Stick a fork in it (Score:4, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday July 03, 2015 @09:05AM (#50038815)

    Reddit is done, the only question is how long does it have left?

    Since Ellen Pao was made interim CEO its been bad decision after bad decision

  • by Lord Agni ( 643860 ) on Friday July 03, 2015 @09:06AM (#50038819)
    I decided to give up on Reddit and come back to my roots on slashdot, and this is the top story I see.
  • And (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Revek ( 133289 )

    Nothing of value was lost.

  • Good (Score:4, Insightful)

    by IWantMoreSpamPlease ( 571972 ) on Friday July 03, 2015 @09:08AM (#50038829) Homepage Journal
    The faster that cess-pool of a circle-jerk self-congratulatory website goes away, the better off the web will be.
    • Re:Good (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward on Friday July 03, 2015 @09:18AM (#50038847)

      Wait -- is that a comment about Reddit or Slashdot...?

      That's not merely cheap snark. I've been reading this site since shortly after it launched, and it's become a howling example of self-parody.

    • I miss fatpeoplehate, because any time someone said something good about it, I knew they were a piece of shit. I don't know enough about Reddit to know which boards to have that opinion of, so I just have that opinion of all of 'em now... because Reddit is home to big collections of jackholes, and they're proud.

  • http://www.voat.co/ [www.voat.co] is currently down. I'm assuming for capacity issues (again)

    Reddit was good, about 5 years ago. It's turned from a time waster to a waste of time.

    I hang out in a few subreddits that aren't bad. The front page has become kind of a joke in a non-funny bad way.

  • by Daniel Hoffmann ( 2902427 ) on Friday July 03, 2015 @09:32AM (#50038917)

    A website comes and makes some "social web application for sharing stuff", said web application has some very interesting discussions -> said web application gets popular -> said web application gets increasingly worse usually as a consequence of trying to monetize it or due to the sheer number of people using (drowning everyone else in noise) -> users start to migrate to alternatives -> only a shell remains -> death.

    See: digg, facebook, myspace, orkut, slashdot...

    • A website comes and makes some "social web application for sharing stuff", said web application has some very interesting discussions -> said web application gets popular -> said web application gets increasingly worse usually as a consequence of trying to monetize it or due to the sheer number of people using (drowning everyone else in noise) -> users start to migrate to alternatives -> only a shell remains -> death.

      See: digg, facebook, myspace, orkut, slashdot...

      I find it funny you put FB in there. Still one of the most popular sites on the internet, but to you it 'tis but a shell.

      • To me facebook is in the stage "said web application gets increasingly worse usually as a consequence of trying to monetize it or due to the sheer number of people using (drowning everyone else in noise)". The users have not yet started to migrate to alternatives.

        Slashdot is the one that is only a shell of what it once was and digg is the one that is dead.

    • by ADRA ( 37398 )

      Facebook's alive and well. Hell, tghey make more money than ever, mostly because:
      1. Users have no control over the narrative (to anything outside their social group)
      2. Everyone and their dog (but not me) uses it
      3. You can send each other useless (fb monetized) links to crap nobody cares about
      4. Its an amazing diversion for people with no lives (don't forget pinterest / buzzfeed / instagram)
      5. Its an amazing way to post how cool you are by posting all the amazing things you do, and like the amazing spread on

      • To me facebook is in the stage "said web application gets increasingly worse usually as a consequence of trying to monetize it or due to the sheer number of people using (drowning everyone else in noise)". The users have not yet started to migrate to alternatives.

  • Reddit, schmeddit (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Godwin O'Hitler ( 205945 ) on Friday July 03, 2015 @09:33AM (#50038923) Journal

    Every time there's an article about reddit I have to visit their site to remind me exactly what reddit is.
    And at that moment I remember why I don't ever remember. I'm still not sure what it's supposed to be.

  • awhile ago

    and i feel vindicated

    reddit needs to pay its mods (say, a cut of ad revenue from their sub)

    if they work for free, they have no real power over them. which is unstable as current developments indicate

    also, if they pay them, they can fire them

    you can say paying mods will change the tenor of reddit but this is bullshit: what motivates someone to mod for free is a sort of pathetic need for power, which is actually worse than any nefariousness due to filthy lucre as their motivation

    bye bye reddit, you were fun. but you have a fatal flaw in your power structure:

    uncaring admins and abusive mods

    so what's the next site to rise?

    any tips?

    • voat.co, although it's currently down as it's been overwhelmed with traffic with people fleeing reddit.

      Or maybe it's time to go back to usenet?
      • hmmm... what about slashdot?

        • I never left. /.'s been my home page for 15+ years. But, it does not encompass everything I want to discuss on the internet, so I want a general purpose discussion forum, too.

          Sadly, though, while /. is a shadow of its former self, it's still better than any of the alternatives. And yes, I'm a subscriber at soylent, but there's nobody there.
  • Meh... (Score:3, Insightful)

    by B33rNinj4 ( 666756 ) on Friday July 03, 2015 @11:01AM (#50039355) Homepage Journal
    Fuck Reddit. It's turning into a SJW/corporate shit-show. Let it go the way of Digg.
  • Rival controversy (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Dwedit ( 232252 ) on Friday July 03, 2015 @11:01AM (#50039357) Homepage

    Ah, Slashdot quickly reporting on Reddit drama, while simultaneously suppressing the Sourceforge drama. How lovely.

  • .. that unlimited freedom of speech ain't all it's cracked up to be. It certainly doesn't scale well.

    I for one won't be back until /r/coontown and it's ilk are gone. That's a shit ton of racists right there...

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