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Malicious Compliance
People conforming to the letter, but not the spirit, of a request. For now, this includes text posts, images, videos and links. Please ensure that the “malicious compliance” aspect is apparent - if you’re making a text post, be sure to explain this part; if it’s an image/video/link, use the “Body” field to elaborate.
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We ENCOURAGE posts about events that happened to you, or someone you know.
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We ACCEPT (for now) reposts of good malicious compliance stories (from other platforms) which did not happen to you or someone you knew. Please use a [REPOST] tag in such situations.
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We DO NOT ALLOW fiction, or posts that break site-wide rules.
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Also check out the following communities:
!fakehistoryporn@lemmy.world !unethicallifeprotips@lemmy.world
This blackout has really shown which subs have actual in-touch moderators, and which ones are just the admins' puppy dogs
A while ago, I had a comment auto-removed on WPT and got a message it was because my account was "not in good standing." When I messaged the WPT mods, they explained that they were test piloting a new tool the admins plan to use. For example, if you have a throwaway email address, no email address, or are connecting via VPN, you may be "not in good standing."
With things like that on the horizon, even if they roll back on what they're doing now, we're still not likely to have a very good time on that site.
I can't blame the mods who are trying to make change through protest (and who may not even be aware of the "not in good standing" BS), but I don't plan to stick around, and I don't foresee a very bright future for reddit at all.
Honesty I think the big political subs are incredibly bot infested. Political content is an amazing way to make people mad and get them to spend more time on a platform, increasing engagement and letting reddit deliver more ads. It's not like it would be the first time they used bots to drive engagement and make communities look bigger.
Don't forget that for many years reddit was the home of the most inciteful Donald Trump propaganda platform with r/t_d.
and dont forget reddit is also the home of the most inciteful Chinese propaganda platform with /r/sino
Worse than bots. Active foreign influencers.
The bot problem is probably domestic. Reddit has much more to gain from artificially driving engagement than any "foreign adversary".
why not both?
The whole site is bot infested! Especially the large subs, but I've personally had scambots pop into my posts even on smaller subreddits.
People who say they won't leave reddit because "there's no good alternative" really have their head in the sand about how bad it really is. Nearly every alternative I've seen suggested is at least better than reddit (except for the really far-right ones like voat).
Pretty much any big sub is totally unusable. The only reason to be on Reddit is for the niche hobby subs
And unfortunately, those are the ones most difficult to find alternatives for.
I absolutely resonate with both your comments, it's the best function reddit served imo. The big mainstream subs were just content factories to create posts to doomscroll through.
Can confirm. You don't need to go far to find dog-piling groupthink ruining discussion.
What a great idea. Just use an algorithm to ban any unprofitable user. Can't lose!
That explains why I got banned a while back and was told I violeted the TOS, but the crime they listed (Abusing the report button) was neither in the TOS nor something I actually did.
Speaking of segues, I didn't realize I'd been on lemmy for ten months already. Huh, look at that!
Ah. So basically China's Social Credit system, but for Reddit.
https://merics.org/en/comment/chinas-social-credit-score-untangling-myth-reality
Interesting article, but according to it there where some pilot studies that tried to penalize citizens based on their social score. So I don't think the meme is entirely wrong.
It's important to identify these arbitrary lines in the sand, thanks.
Finally putting all that karma to good use.
I'mma need some sauce for dat pasta. That's too wild to not post screenshots.
https://i.imgur.com/U79L2kV.jpg
There ya be
That reddithelp link clickable.
@LinkOpensChest_wav
And the AutoModerator notification link: https://i.imgur.com/7Yzm2IS.jpg
Thanks. Shit's deliciously wrong.
edit: But you know what... having recently watched The Blackenning (2023)... it honestly feels very... White.
I can't imagine a website so anti-CCP it utterly internalized the social credit meme (despite it being somewhat more nuanced in reality, I still don't approve of it, just learned it gets exaggerated in the west) would take well to an invisible 'reputation system' that demands data collection and punishes privacy actions.
The vibes continue to deteriorate.
The mods of r/NBA continued using the sub during the blackout and discussed the NBA finals and Denver's parade.
The moral fortitude of most pro sports fans is abysmally low, so that tracks with my expectations
To try and be charitable to the WPT mods: that sub is a magnet for bots and bad actors. All those measures sound like a shotgun approach to combating spam to me.
I really don't envy having to moderate a large politically oriented sub like that. I imagine it burns you out fast to being open and fair-minded in how you approach moderation due to the sheer avalanche of bullshit you're confronted with cleaning up.
Combating bots by banning anyone without an email is understandable and seems doable for the near future, but like it would mostly be a hiccup for the people churning them out.
Google ignores any periods in an email address, so if you want to sign up with the same email all you have to do is fill it with differently-placed periods. What are they gonna do? Ban everyone who shares your name from having a reddit? Ban Gmail? If they did, there's still the plus trick that isn't specific to gmail
I do understand that point of view, but the fact that they're piloting a really invasive tool on behalf of the admins and subsequently refused to go black -- these make me feel far less charitable
When did this happen? During the blackout? You say "a while ago" and I'm just curious.
This happened 3 weeks ago, just before things really started to get ugly on reddit
How/why would mods have access to an accounts mail details??