• teolan@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    There needs to be a massive resignation of reddit moderators.

    If reddit refuses to hear the mod’s voice, why would anyone give them their labour for free?

    Let the power-tripping mods stay, and let the sane mods come to other platforms. Let the site go to shit or make Reddit spend millions investing in its own moderation team.

    • realitista@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I closed down my subs and moved here and started new ones. I’m not looking back. My subs were only moderated by me, so they can hire someone if they want to open them up again.

    • MTO@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      It would be better if the mods stopped moderating, without removing themselves. Just let the communities become overwhelming cesspits, making it that much more difficult for the admins to scrub. That is the nuclear option, though, and it seems that the mods actually have hope for Reddit to compromise.

      • anaximander@feddit.uk
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        1 year ago

        I think what they’re doing is the most impactful. If the mods just stop, then under ToS they can be legitimately removed as inactive. If they’re active and following the clearly-expressed will of the community as determined by voting (you know, that core principle that all of Reddit is built on) then any action taken to remove them is an obvious and egregious violation of Reddit’s stated policies. If the community will just happens to be something that makes the website less programme l monetisable… well, that’s a shame, but nothing in Reddit’s user ToS says "you must work towards helping us profit from your interactions with the site ".

        Plus, many of these communities are voting to do things that accelerate the transformation of their subreddits into hard-to-clean-up cesspits.

      • Risk@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Honestly, the train wreck of reddit corporatism isn’t new - if mods and users can’t see already that they aren’t valued then they’ll likely never realise.