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248 votes
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According to Reddark, ~6k of 8,800 subreddits are still dark including four of the largest seven by subscriber count
92 votes -
Reddit account was banned after adding my subs to the protest
22 votes -
The fediverse is already dead
13 votes -
YouTube moderation bots will start issuing warnings, 24-hour bans
10 votes -
Ubisoft and Riot Games announce the “Zero Harm in Comms” research project to detect harmful content in game chats
4 votes -
Astronomer incorrectly suspended from Twitter by automatic moderation
6 votes -
Hey Elon: Let me help you speed run the content moderation learning curve
33 votes -
Yishan Wong (ex-Reddit CEO) on moderation
15 votes -
Elon Musk has taken control of Twitter and fired its top executives
43 votes -
Welcome to hell, Elon - Nilay Patel on Elon's Twitter acquisition
35 votes -
r/Onlyfans101 mods are currently manipulating tons of NSFW subreddits
16 votes -
How Twitter’s child porn problem ruined its plans for an OnlyFans competitor
9 votes -
Flag mods and us (and you)
19 votes -
Jordan Peterson suspended from Twitter, says it might as well be a ban: 'I won’t apologize'
16 votes -
Facebook, Instagram taking down posts about US abortion pills
5 votes -
Before Uvalde, a platform fails to answer kids' alarms. Tech companies keep building systems to detect violent threats. Why didn't Yubo's work?
5 votes -
We should all know less about each other
12 votes -
Pinterest bans climate change misinformation and conspiracy theories
9 votes -
Reddit announces update to user blocking: Blocked users will no longer be able to see or interact with your content on the platform
16 votes -
Reddit allows hate speech to flourish in its global forums, moderators say
31 votes -
I got permanently suspended from Reddit today. Now I know what Reddit has become.
My account was permanently suspended saying I had violated TOS multiple times, not only is this wrong, my previous suspension was unfair too, but I didn't appeal because it was only 1 week long...
My account was permanently suspended saying I had violated TOS multiple times, not only is this wrong, my previous suspension was unfair too, but I didn't appeal because it was only 1 week long and I know the state of reddit moderation, I just let it go, now this is getting out of hand, what is wrong? How can an account with so much contribution be suspended unfairly without any valid reason? Something needs to be done, if this continues, it's a matter of time for Reddit to become Facebook, mark my words. Peace ☮️.
6 votes -
The tyrannical mods of Stack Overflow
6 votes -
Rust Moderation Team resigns
20 votes -
CBC is keeping Facebook comments closed on news posts
21 votes -
The lonely work of moderating Hacker News
13 votes -
Evaluating the effectiveness of deplatforming as a moderation strategy on Twitter
6 votes -
Vienna museums starts OnlyFans account after its TikTok is banned for posting nudes
17 votes -
Twitter testing prompts on Android and iOS for 'intense' conversations
@Twitter Support: Ever want to know the vibe of a conversation before you join in? We're testing prompts on Android and iOS that give you a heads up if the convo you're about to enter could get heated or intense.This is a work in progress as we learn how to better support healthy conversation.
4 votes -
High Court of Australia rules that media outlets are publishers of third-party Facebook comments
12 votes -
OnlyFans will prohibit "content containing sexually-explicit conduct" (but still allow nudity) starting October 1, at the request of banking/payment providers
50 votes -
Reddit has banned the misogynistic "Men Going Their Own Way" subreddits r/MGTOW and r/MGTOW2
AHS: 🦀. 🦀. 🦀. MGTOW and MGTOW2 are banned 🦀. 🦀. 🦀. SRD: r/MGTOW has been banned r/MGTOW was quarantined back in January 2020 after being cited in an FBI prosecution brief during the sentencing of...
AHS: 🦀. 🦀. 🦀. MGTOW and MGTOW2 are banned 🦀. 🦀. 🦀.
SRD: r/MGTOW has been bannedr/MGTOW was quarantined back in January 2020 after being cited in an FBI prosecution brief during the sentencing of a U.S. Coast Guard officer planning a domestic terrorist attack.
37 votes -
Facebook cracks down on discussing ‘hoes’ in gardening group
12 votes -
Why a YouTube chat about chess got flagged for hate speech
9 votes -
Conservative social networks keep making the same mistake
13 votes -
Not trying to make waves but why are articles posted to news that relate to lgbt moved?
As a new member I am really hesitant to post this but I recently posted an article to ~news that was related to lgbt issues and it was moved to ~lgbt. I fully support a sub section devoted to lgbt...
As a new member I am really hesitant to post this but I recently posted an article to ~news that was related to lgbt issues and it was moved to ~lgbt. I fully support a sub section devoted to lgbt but news should be news regardless.
Just because it has an lgbt angle does not mean it should be moved. I'm not even lgbt myself but I find it sort of hurtful that a news article was pushed off ~news. So I ask this, and once again not trying to make waves. But why?
Edit: I would love to be a member of this community as I am personally seeking a less asshole filled reddit alternative. But pushing a news article to another ~ just because it relates a bit more to them shouldn't be a thing. If you are tolerant it relates to us all. And yes I know I posted it in ~news because I was trying to participate and I'm a news junky.
Sorry.
Edit 2: This was a sad sorry way to come in to this community. I apologize.
19 votes -
Reddit is about to delete a lot of subreddits based on post activity metrics
31 votes -
Should Tildes have rules for healthcare advice?
Sometimes Tildes users give people healthcare advice. Sometimes that advice disagrees with the advice already given by a qualified registered healthcare professional. That might be okay if the...
Sometimes Tildes users give people healthcare advice. Sometimes that advice disagrees with the advice already given by a qualified registered healthcare professional. That might be okay if the tildes advice was compliant with national guidance, but sometimes it isn't. Sometimes it's bad, dangerous, advice.
Should Tildes have rules about this?
16 votes -
Reddit faces lawsuit for failing to remove child sexual abuse material
15 votes -
Is content moderation a dead end?
19 votes -
Life’s a Bitche: Facebook says sorry for shutting down town’s page
6 votes -
Discord will start designating entire servers as NSFW, and prevent all under-18 users from accessing them, as well as all users on iOS
27 votes -
Twitch will ban users for 'severe misconduct' that occurs away from its site
18 votes -
Thoughts on running online communities from the creator of Improbable Island
15 votes -
How would you improve advertising on Reddit?
Let me preface that I'm well aware that if given the choice between frequent, untargeted ads or fewer targeted ads, the average Tilderino's response would be "Neither." However, given that social...
Let me preface that I'm well aware that if given the choice between frequent, untargeted ads or fewer targeted ads, the average Tilderino's response would be "Neither."
However, given that social media at scale has yet to establish a sustainable business model that doesn't rely on advertising (people like free content, after all), it seems advertising has become a necessary evil (and has pervaded nearly all forms of media for the past century regardless).
With that in mind, I think coming up with creative solutions to deliver relevant advertising while preserving user privacy and avoiding destructive feedback loops (i.e. where the search for ad revenue compromises the user base and content generation) is an interesting thought exercise. This is one of social media's largest problems, imho, but it might be easier to analyze just Reddit as a platform due to its similarities (and notable differences) to Tildes.
A couple thoughts of my own:
- Whitelist "safe" subreddits - A massive problem for Reddit is identifying content that brands want to avoid association with (e.g. porn, violence, drugs). While new subreddits crop up every day, the large ones do not change so fast and could be classified as safe content spaces (e.g. /r/aww)
- User subreddit subscriptions - Rather than target ads based on the subreddit currently being viewed, why not use the subs people have voluntarily indicated they are interested in?
- Allow users to tag content - While people can report content to the mods today, there is no ability to tag content (like Tildes has) from a user level. Content that's inappropriate for advertising may not necessarily be a reportable offense. By allowing users to classify content, better models for determining "good" content vs. "bad" could be developed using ML.
- Use Mods to determine content appropriateness - User supplied data may introduce too much noise into any given dataset, and perhaps mods are a better subjective filter to rely on. Certain subreddits can have biased mods for sure, but without trying to overhaul content moderation entirely, could mod bans/flair be used to indicate suitable content for ads?
- Use computer vision to classify content - While this wouldn't work at scale, an up-and-coming post could have a nebulous title and difficult-to-decipher sarcastic comments. The post itself could be an image macro or annotated video that could be used to determine the subject matter much more effectively.
To be clear, the spirit of my initial prompt isn't "how can Reddit make more money?" per se, but how can it find a sustainable business model without destroying itself/impacting society at large. Facebook and Twitter seem to have optimized for "engagement" metrics which leads to prioritization of outrage porn and political divisiveness. Snapchat and Instagram seem to have succumb to being mostly an ad delivery engine with some overly-filtered content of "real life" influencers (read: marketers) strewn in between. None of these seem like a net-good for society.
What are all your thoughts? Perhaps Big Tech social media is irredeemable at this point, but I'm trying not to take such a defeatist attitude and instead explore any positive solutions.
9 votes -
The internet’s most beloved fanfiction site is undergoing a reckoning
15 votes -
With Parler down, QAnon moves onto a ‘free speech’ TikTok clone
10 votes -
Facebook's Oversight Board announces its first decisions, overturning Facebook's decision in four out of five cases
8 votes -
Twitter announces Birdwatch, a community-based approach to misinformation
21 votes -
The great Wikipedia titty scandal
36 votes