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How many times do you get a Discord server in your Google results when searching for something?

Reddit's value proposition is not the ego stroking of the 0.0000001% that are moderators, it's the discoverability and interoperability between unrelated niches.

If little dictators don't get their kick from rulling lawlessly on a community anymore, I say good ridance.




Ego stroking of some mods is far from what is happening.. please get the full picture. Those unpaid mods that did work for Reddit for free get their tools taken away they need to do this unpaid work reasonably, while at the same time Reddit starts price gouging 3rd party apps to extract more value for their IPO - Reddit wouldn't be there where it is today if it wouldn't have all the free content of the users and free work of the mods. Kind of ridiculous, but I mean how Reddit is acting, they can just remove those unpaid moderators, replace them with paid ones and restore everything back to normal: If that is your's and also Reddit's view, where is the problem then?

Sad.


Only 3% of moderation actions come from from third-party apps [1]. What was that again about taking away the tools the moderators are using?

This whole thing about third-party apps has been ridiculously mismanaged by the communities.

The only 2 reasons people want to keep third-party apps are 1) they prefer them to the official one, 2) they don't want ads. Both of those reasons are valid, but neither are even remotely close to justifying the actions that those Reddit nerds are taking.

[1] https://www.reddit.com/r/reddit/comments/145bram/addressing_...


The communities are what made the Reddit results so relevant.

I get not being sympathetic with petty kings of message boards, but let’s be real, Reddit is an awful company whose incompetence is legendary. They’ve failed to monetize, failed to maintain the user experience and now are failing to keep a vital aspect of their business going.

Ultimately their failure is a good thing. Reddit broke the internet by ending the phpbb era. Time for the next thing.


>How many times do you get a Discord server in your Google results when searching for something?

What does this have to do with what I wrote?

>the discoverability and interoperability between unrelated niches.

Why are those niches on Reddit if Reddit isn't giving away faux forums?

>If little dictators don't get their kick from rulling lawlessly on a community anymore, I say good ridance.

Odd because I get the impression you prefer the communities those little dictators create to be on a google crawlable site over discord.


> >How many times do you get a Discord server in your Google results when searching for something?

> What does this have to do with what I wrote?

You are suggesting that those users will go away from Reddit to form separate dedicated communities, and I am saying that they will try but fail to attract people.

Reddit allows the vast majority of the subs that participate in the blackout to survive simply because they are a part of Reddit and benefit from its infrastructure and features.

You really think a website dedicated to cute animals will attract 34M subscribers like /r/aww? And another one with the exact same theme will attract 4M subscribers (with a lot of overlap) like /r/Eyebleach?

Those communities exist and strive because the barrier to entry is literally non-existent. It takes one input to create them and one click to join them.

> Odd because I get the impression you prefer the communities those little dictators create to be on a google crawlable site over discord.

I would prefer if there were no little dictators, with elections every 3 months, showing detailed stats of the moderators actions, and most of the moderation to be in the style of StackOverflow, so community driven.




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