SNOOcalypse - document, discuss, and promote the downfall of Reddit.
- SNOOcalypse is closing down.
Ladies, gentlemen, and cherished non-binary folks: it has been a serious joy to moderate this community for you.
Based on the general input from an earlier thread, I'm closing this community down; I apologise for rushing this decision but it's for the best.
___________
I'll also use the opportunity to publicly release the modlog of this community, showing at least which actions were taken by myself:
I can't show the other usernames because this would be allegedly "doxxing".
I'm doing so because I believe that transparency is essential to nurture a healthy and friendly community. I also encourage people here to check the mod logs of other lemmy.ml communities.
- Reddit is so untrustworthy. r/modcoord thread purges all pro-fediverse comments, then r/redditalternatives removes the thread exposing it.
r/redditalternatives thread: This is why I don't trust anything on reddit. A r/modcoord thread full of anti-fediverse comments, and all of my pro-fediverse comments are removed and the mods won't answer why. https://web.archive.org/web/20240111205116/https://old.reddit.com/r/RedditAlternatives/comments/193iuf1/this_is_why_i_dont_trust_anything_on_reddit_a/
Content of deleted post https://archive.ph/cV8X6
Removed comments https://web.archive.org/web/20240111211111/https://www.reveddit.com/y/briangutaccess/
- Deciding the fate of c/snoocalypse - tell me what you think!
I wish to stop being a moderator in lemmy.ml. However, I don't know what to do with this community; the last time I asked for new mods nobody showed interest. So I'd like the help of other members of the community to decide it.
Here are a few options:
- Migrate this community. Frankly I don't care about Reddit nowadays, but I'm still willing to mod a comm about it in another instance. So if users tell me "migrate SNOOcalypse to [instance]!", I'll seriously consider it.
- Recruiting new mods. If you wish to be a mod, please tell me so in this thread. I'll check if you'd be a good mod, recruit you, step down myself, and you're free to moderate it as you wish.
- Closing down this comm. There are a few other comms about Reddit across the Lemmy/Kbinverse, so we'd use those instead. If neither of the alternatives above is viable/feasible, this is likely what's going to happen.
- Something else. Then please do tell me. As long as it doesn't boil down to "negligently leave this comm active but unmoderated", I'll consider it.
I'm planning to step down 19/February/2024.
So, what do you think that should be done?
- In unsurprising news, Reddit prepares IPOwww.businessinsider.com Reddit's cofounder said that at first the company felt like 'a homework assignment that got out of hand' rather than a business
Reddit's cofounder Steve Huffman said in its early days he filled up most of the site with content using different accounts until it got more users.
> Now the social media platform is aiming for an IPO in the first quarter of 2024 with a valuation of $15 billion, and has been in talks with potential investors like Goldman Sachs and and Morgan Stanley, per Bloomberg.
- New Study: At Least 15% of All Reddit Content is Corporate Trolls Trying to Manipulate Public Opinionmedium.com New Study: At Least 15% of All Reddit Content is Corporate Trolls Trying to Manipulate Public…
The Impact of Corporate Trolls on Reddit: A Growing Problem
If you're paywalled, check this archive link.
What the article calls "corporate trolls" is simply astroturfing. It became rampant in Reddit; as the walled garden was unwalled, more of the organic grass has been replaced.
- Reddit says a bug is letting slurs get added to its links - The Vergewww.theverge.com Reddit says a bug is letting slurs get added to its links
Some of the links are appearing prominently on Google.
- How long do you think Reddit will let the Revanced apps work?
Hello everyone,
Disclaimer: I enjoy Lemmy, it's a great place, I post in a few communities, it's nice.
However, I always feel like we a missing "a few people", which are the people still on Reddit thanks to the revanced apps, but would probably leave if they had to use the official one.
So my question (and it's purely a theoretical discussion, as I guess no one here has any real idea on what's being decided by Reddit management) is the one in the title, or in other words: how long before Reddit starts tracking down revanced apps to force them to either pay a legit app (such as Infinity or Narwhal).
- Reddit might once again be flirting with an IPOtechcrunch.com Reddit might once again be flirting with an IPO | TechCrunch
The San Francisco-based company, co-founded by Steve Huffman, Aaron Swartz and Alexis Ohanian in 2005, could go public as early as Q1.
IPO = Initial Public Offering, where shareholders offer to sell their shares to the public, shifting a company from a "private company" (it belongs to me, you, and that guy) to a "public company" (it belongs to anyone who pays enough for the shares).
The userbase has been always touchy when it comes to IPO, and rightfully so; they know that the new owners will only care about squeezing the platform dry. As such, I predict a new flood of Redditfugees to Lemmy and Kbin.
- Tool to copy Reddit comment chains
So I was reading this post and decided to make the tool described, as a userscript (I credit ChatGPT with doing most of the work, which went pretty quickly). To use it, install a compatible userscript browser extension such as https://violentmonkey.github.io/ , then press install on the linked page. Reddit comments should now have a 'copy-context' button that will put the comment chain in your clipboard. I made it for old.reddit so probably won't work with the redesign. Another limitation is that it will only work to copy what is on the current page, so if the comment chain is too deep it's not going to get all of it.
Any feedback is welcome. Also if someone who can read javascript wants to give it a once-over and confirm for people that it isn't malicious that would be cool too.
- A way to lower dependency on reddit.
Hi folks! I just came up with something, no idea if its good but you judge that:
TL;DR: Can we make a browser extention or something that gives us a button to copy an entire comment chain with crucial, niche advice to a lemmy post or is that gone since the API went down?
I often google things for work and hobbies, code snippets, log entries, ways to make my insane docker setups work. For example, I got a lemmy instance working in docker with this.
Very often, I end up on reddit. If the post or comment in question is helpful, I'd like to upvote or ask a follow up question. For that I still need my reddit account.
But for the "praise helpful comment" I could also do that here. Some people link to the comment/post which also brings back traffic to reddit (which I dont like).
So I'd probably just copy the post (and/or comment chain in question) to a new post on lemmy.
It would go a little like this:
- User1: "Post describing a topic"
- User2: Helpful comment nr 1
- User1: Follow up question
- User2: Helpful comment nr 2
For that, I'd need some kind of automation. Since the API is gone, I don't know if that is possible but the option to "copy entire comment chain up to this comment" would definitely be awesome.
Feel free to tell me otherwise.
Edit: If this isn't obvious: It would accumulate the most helpful stuff from reddit on here without it being blindly crossposted by bots and would push google results (because its niche!) and most likely not a copyright issue because it is so few things that it should fly under the radar.
- ‘Reddit can survive without search’: company reportedly threatens to block Googlewww.theverge.com ‘Reddit can survive without search’: company reportedly threatens to block Google
Reddit is apparently seeking to strike deals with big AI companies.
cross-posted from: https://feddit.ch/post/1794418
- Reddit mods dumped tokens hours before blockchain program terminationcointelegraph.com Reddit mods dumped tokens hours before blockchain program termination
At the time of the announcement, the moderators of most of the subreddits involved with the community points program claimed to be unaware of the decision.
Summary: Reddit warns mods that it's ending its crypto program, before it warns the other users. What could go wrong? /s
- Reddit introduces "collectible expressions"old.reddit.com Introducing Collectible Expressions
Posted in r/modnews by u/werksquan • 0 points and 22 comments
Archive link: https://web.archive.org/web/20231018205209/https://old.reddit.com/r/modnews/comments/17b00ch/introducing_collectible_expressions/
- Reddit is killing blockchain-based Community Pointstechcrunch.com Reddit is killing blockchain-based Community Points | TechCrunch
Citing scaling issues, Reddit is shutting down its blockchain-based Community Points in favor of prioritizing other rewards programs.
Reddit is sunsetting its blockchain-based Community Points product, the company announced on Tuesday. A Reddit admin (employee) shared the announcement about Community Points, which uses the Ethereum blockchain, on a few subreddits, including r/CryptoCurrency (which had its own “moons” crypto token), r/FortniteBR (which had its own “bricks” token), and r/EthTrader (which had its own “donuts” token).
The value of those tokens has, predictably, fallen off of a cliff, as CoinDesk reports drops of between 60 and 90 percent.
- Is there a list of, uh, sublemmies that spawned from Reddit communities?
As a 10+ year Reddit user, I recently made the jump here to Lemmy and was hoping to re-join some of the old groups. Is there a running list somewhere of all the groups on here that started as subreddits?
What's the right term for them, anyway? Group? Sublemmy? Community?
- The conspiracy subreddit is full of anti-LGBTQ rhetoric, despite Reddit rules prohibiting such contentwww.mediamatters.org The conspiracy subreddit is full of anti-LGBTQ rhetoric, despite Reddit rules prohibiting such content
Content warning: This article contains numerous examples of bigoted rhetoric. Users on Reddit’s “r/conspiracy” forum have repeatedly and openly posted anti-LGBTQ content for years without pushback, despite the platform’s rules prohibiting “hate based on identity or vulnerability” and anti-LGBTQ “gro...
- reddit r/movies isn't doing too wellold.reddit.com Why is this subreddit now just askreddit for movies?
Some time in the last few months, r/movies has been entirely consumed by askreddit-style questions like "What's your favorite hidden gem??" or...
https://archive.ph/CNofz
> # Why is this subreddit now just askreddit for movies? > > Some time in the last few months, r/movies has been entirely consumed by askreddit-style questions like "What's your favorite hidden gem??" or "What actor fell off the map??" > > [...] > > What is now causing all these unique, seemingly-non-bot posters to suddenly start flooding this particular subreddit with their discussion posts, instead of going to askreddit? Did the whole reddit protest shit change the moderation rules? Has the subreddit been infiltrated by a secret Buzzfeed content farming cabal? I unsubscribed from r/askreddit because I got sick of this shit, but now it's back on r/movies! > > What is going on??
I think the comments are most interesting though
> Because the audience for reddit has dwindled since July. Reddits offial site and app push controversial posts over just well yovkted ones. Most controversial posts asks inane questions. Then there's bots reposting those questions for karma and then websites juicing social media for content to get crammed down your throat via SEO.
> They should make a second internet just for people
> This all started with the boycott. > > [...] > > I’d assumed things would go back to “normal” after the boycott, but it looks like a lot of power users really did take their ball and go home. (I wonder what they’re doing with their time instead? Hopefully some new hobbies? Time with friends?) Maybe reddit will regret removing the 3rd party apps, after all? Maybe we’ll just accept a future where niche subs become little more than BuzzFeed polls, but we get paid if our poll does well, so users won’t care?
> It's because Reddit is trying to drive engagement. I don't know if you noticed, but since the purge of third-party apps, the comment sections have been kind of meager, and things don't get as many upvotes as they used to. Heck, half the comments act like bots anyway. It seems like reddit has been distilled down to those most addicted to it and has taken a hard lean into all the most extreme views.
> When Reddit killed third party apps, the quality fell off all over the place. It took me about a month to realize the timing and why r/all had so much AITA rage bait stories and celebrity gossip and stuff now. I think a lot of the quality posters and people who liked more high brow discussions just left Reddit.
- Has the political spectrum on reddit shifted?
Tl;dr: have there been any writings, surveys, or studies on the political composition of Reddit shifting in large communities?
----
I logged out of my reddit account a while ago but still browse some subreddits without logging in and have recently noticed more far-right rhetoric in general. I'm curious to know if others have seen this trend or, even better, wrote about it or documented it. Some examples I noticed were r/sweden and r/exmuslim. These are two communities I used to frequent often and both of them now have descended into more upvoted far-right rhetoric of the "deport them all!" caliber.
I have a feeling (from my own experience browsing these communities) that such content used to be quickly addressed and downvoted, and both of those subreddits don't tend to ban people on the fly nor overmoderate. Sometimes I see threads with the same title (likely posted by the same person) on both the subreddit and the corresponding lemmy community where the difference in opinion and the general political leaning is obvious.
So, not to succumb to my own biases, have there been any writings, surveys, or studies on the political composition of Reddit shifting in large communities?
- Reddit Account Manager: a free tool to help you migrate to Lemmy by offloading your Reddit accounts, bookmarks, and subscriptions
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/5935182
What is this product, and what does it do?
Reddit Account Manager allows you to keep track of all of your accounts, subreddit subscriptions, and bookmarks—all in one place.
How does this product help me?
Reddit Account Manager acts as a database repository for your Reddit accounts, so that if and when you decide to delete your Reddit account, you have your accounts, subscriptions, and bookmarks all in one place. With Reddit Account Manager, you'll:
- Know exactly when you created every account
- Know how much post/comment karma each account has
- Know when it's time to delete an account
- Have all your subscriptions mapped out and ready to go for the next account you create
- Save all your bookmarks, even if your accounts are long gone
- Know when an account is active, deleted, or not created yet
Why did you build this product?
Despite many Redditors' desires to delete their account and start a new one, many refrain from doing so for multiple reasons. Reasons include (but are not limited to):
- Losing track of the subreddits they're subscribed to
- Losing bookmarks
- Lack of data export functionality from Reddit
- Time and effort in switching (and ditching) accounts
Why have multiple Reddit accounts, and why would I want to delete them periodically?
All of your Reddit activity is public. Over time, you become increasingly identifiable. By having multiple Reddit accounts designated to specific subreddits/interests, and deleting them after some time, you:
- Maintain pseudo-anonymity
- Subscribe to different subreddits across different accounts
- Keep a low profile and mix up data
Which platform do I need to use Reddit Account Manager?
You can use it out-of-the-box with any the following:
- Airtable
- Baserow
- Notion
- Coda
- ClickUp
Can I use this to store or migrate my Reddit data now that Reddit has killed third-party apps?
Absolutely, yep. You can (and should) use it however it works best for you.
Why did you make it free?
We all deserve privacy and to not be tracked all over the web. I knew this could bring value to every single Reddit user who wants to delete their account, start a new one, or simply keep track of everything you want to, so that if you ever do want to destroy your account, you'll be able to without worrying about losing track of it all.
And Reddit's recent decisions, Reddit Account Manager serves as a great tool to export your data and take it with you wherever you go next.
- Reddit is removing ability to opt out of ad personalization based on your activity on the platformtechcrunch.com Reddit is removing ability to opt out of ad personalization based on your activity on the platform | TechCrunch
Reddit is removing the ability to opt out of ad personalization based on Reddit activity and adding ability to restrict certain types of ads.
- I found a real replacement to reddit's "r/place". mtPlace!
ill update with more info about how it goes, for now heres the site
- I may be dumb, but why does reddit have long chains of deleted comments?
Why does reddit often have at least 1 semi long thread with all of the posts deleted?
- Reddit curtails rights of "inactive" moderatorsold.reddit.com New Protections for Communities with Inactive Mods
Tl;dr: We’ve launched an update to protect communities from unwanted changes made by inactive moderators. Hi Mods, I’m u/agoldenzebra from...
クロスポスト: https://lemmy.world/post/5775159
> Archive link: https://web.archive.org/web/20230926185734/https://old.reddit.com/r/modnews/comments/16sqqx9/new_protections_for_communities_with_inactive_mods/
- Reddit is going to let you turn gold into moneywww.theverge.com Reddit is going to let you turn gold into money
It’s all part of a new “Contributor Program.”
Don’t worry though, any kind of payment (including gold) for moderating is still not allowed.
- Reddit implements hidden "credit scores" only visible to adminsold.reddit.com Contributor Quality Score available to all communities!
Posted in r/modnews by u/uselessKnowledgeGuru • 23 points and 134 comments
Edit: Archived link is https://web.archive.org/web/20230915143215/https://old.reddit.com/r/modnews/comments/16is6dh/contributor_quality_score_available_to_all/
- Reddit Activity Plummeted After The Protestswww.garbageday.email We're all living on r/MadeMeSmile's Internet Now
Read to the end for some scrumbling
Excerpt:
>Most major subreddits show a decrease of between 50 and 90 percent in average daily posts and comments, when compared to a year ago. This suggests the problem is way fewer users, not the same number of users browsing less. The huge and universal dropoff also suggests that people left, either because of the changes or the protests, and they aren’t coming back.
- What the hell is going on with Reddit astroturfing?
Honestly I'm not sure where best to discuss this but I've been seeing a crazy rise in astroturfing lately.
A couple examples I've found that are boggling my mind: Antivirus https://old.reddit.com/r/GettingOverItGame/comments/165kgw7/best_antivirus_reddit_recommends_in_2023_for/ Here is a niche gaming subreddit crosspost of a post on a user whose posts are kinda... sus? They all seem like shit copy written by AI.
I mean who says >Reddit, with its vast user-driven content and unfiltered opinions, is a goldmine for genuine reviews. If you're searching for the best antivirus Reddit users vouch for in 2023, you're in the right place.
Hella questionable.
And the links? 1: removed post. 2: Links thru some redirecter that are all to the two VPNs being advertised by the post.
I mean it's obviously an advertisement just from the fact that only the two shilled services are linked to.
Another example: https://old.reddit.com/r/Spyware/comments/159e2te/what_is_the_best_antivirus_of_2023/
Same products. Same links to only the shilled products. There's also links to trustpilot but I did a bit of digging and it seems that they're like yelp in that you can get reviews removed? sigh.
What I find interesting here is the fact that this spyware subreddit is new and tiny, and one of the moderators made this veryyyyy similar AI post.
I mean it even has almost the exact same "Other Subreddits to _____ Antivirus Software" section.
Frankly I'm wondering if I should break the links just so they don't get extra weight on search engines.
I've also seen tons of sock puppet accounts for crappy dating apps, but honestly I'm more of a lurker and I've ran out of energy to write anything else here 😌
- Reddit faces content quality concerns after its Great Mod Purgearstechnica.com Reddit faces content quality concerns after its Great Mod Purge
Concerns of Redditor safety, jeopardized research amid new mods and API rules.
The outcome was predicted by plenty users in this community, but now the news are noticing it.
- Relay for Reddit now charges based on how much you use itwww.theverge.com One surviving Reddit app plans to charge based on how much you use it
Relay for Reddit could cost between $1 and $5 per month.
Relay was (yup) one of the third party apps that survived the API-calypse. But this sort of model is unsustainable in the long run, given that the competitor (the broken native app) is free and unlimited.
The obvious future monopoly of the broken native app is bad for the platform in the long run, given that Reddit always sucked off ideas from third party apps; and now there's no incentive whatsoever to make it better, after Reddit Inc. killed the better competitors.
- This is what Reddit will become
Reddit will turn into modern Digg due to removing features. Can't wait for them to remove the downvote!
- The Reddit Protest Is Finally Over. Reddit Won. [Clickbaity title, but be sure to check the article itself]gizmodo.com The Reddit Protest Is Finally Over. Reddit Won.
The last major holdouts in the protest against Reddit’s API pricing relented, abandoning the so-called “John Oliver rules” which only allowed posts featuring the TV host. It's the official end of the battle. The Reddit protest is over, and Reddit won.
The title is a bit clickbaity but the article is worth a read. To keep it short:
- large subreddits stopped protesting
- 1.8k subreddits are still in the dark, but those are rather small
- [from the article] "Though the Reddit team likely caused permanent damage to the platform and its relationship with users, Spez got his way. But that victory might not mean much."
IMO it was a Pyrrhic victory. Sure, the protests ended, and most users are still stuck in that shithole... but the reputation damage won't be reversed, Reddit managed to seed its competitors (as this one) with the necessary userbase to make them functional, and odds are that Reddit will keep going in its death spiral. And that doesn't even take into account the amount of bad press that it generated, that will hurt IPO numbers for sure.