Reddit had a lot of "zombie" content: old popular content that was scraped and reposted by karma farming bots. If you spent way too much time lurking, you'd start to notice that you'd seen almost every post before (probably 6 months prior). It definitely has more real content than Lemmy currently does, which is why we must nourish and protect our precious little sapling of a content aggregator.
How many times must they be sued for this exact thing? It would be nice if they faced some real consequences this time.
I wouldn't be able to adequately and fairly summarize it. The mod being discussed probably spent more time posting new threads than posting comments, but was the first to reach 1 million karma, remained top 10 karma until 2020ish and is still one of the top ranking by karma even though they haven't posted anything since 2 days before Ghislaine Maxwell's arrest. This person isn't someone I ever interacted with either, even though they were a powermod of many of the top subreddits.
One of the most prolific power mods of all time may have been Ghislaine Maxwell. There's quite a bit of circumstantial evidence to suggest so.
Edit: I'm adding a link to an objective, comprehensive analysis of the theory here
dances an angry jig while sobbing
Boooooooooo, karma farming is one of the reasons Reddit is the way it is. We don't need bots scraping old posts, reposting them and then other bots posting the top comments from the old post. That along with the totally natural and candid "this product™ changed my life, so let me tell you about it" posts are my least favorite advent of the last decade of Reddit.
Words of wisdom. The most efficient solution will speak for itself. People don't like wasting time, effort, or money.
Publicly Lemme Ask Your Earnest Radical Opinion Nobody Expected
Couldn't agree more. People here need to be okay with the possibility that Reddit continues to be popular even though it will continue to be the same scummy company that treats its users like cattle. Those of us who care about that kind of stuff are a minority of the users. There are likely tens of thousands of people who lurk Reddit, click the ads, and don't even know about the API debacle... and that's okay, we should all let it go.
Major Assholes
Petty Tyrants
An actual human sex trafficker (allegedly)
Very true, and I'd much prefer everyone having access than only Mods/Admins having access. If anyone can see, then everyone should be able to see. Down with internet feudalism!
Though I wish this were true it is not. Romanian authorities, specifically Ramona Bolla of DIICOT confirmed that the tweet had nothing to do with locating him.