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18 votes
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Carole Cadwalladr: Facebook's role in Brexit -- and the threat to democracy
10 votes -
Why you can no longer get lost in the crowd
12 votes -
Behind every robot is a human
6 votes -
Mark Zuckerberg says he wants to fix the internet. Don't take him seriously.
7 votes -
Mark Zuckerberg: The internet needs new rules. Let’s start in these four areas
13 votes -
Jeff Bezos investigation finds the Saudis obtained his private data
10 votes -
The life of a comment moderator for a right-wing website
27 votes -
Opinion piece: Bitcoin is close to becoming worthless
23 votes -
Smearing Soros to stoke hate: You too, Facebook?
7 votes -
Opinion: Palmer Luckey was fired from Facebook because of losing the the $500 million IP lawsuit to ZeniMax, not his politics
7 votes -
I bought used voting machines on eBay for $100 apiece. What I found was alarming.
26 votes -
Kara Swisher: Who will teach Silicon Valley to be ethical?
12 votes -
Internet hacking is about to get much worse - We can no longer leave online security to the market
22 votes -
Did Facebook lLearn anything from the Cambridge Analytica debacle? An even bigger data breach suggests it didn’t.
14 votes -
Sorry Apple, but the sweet smell of 6S is enough for me
17 votes -
The coders of Kentucky
7 votes -
We hold people with power to account. Why not algorithms?
12 votes -
Why computer science students are demanding more ethics classes
22 votes -
Why you need a network-wide ad-blocker
17 votes -
Censorship 2.0: Shadowy forces controlling online conversations
9 votes -
Our phones and gadgets are now endangering the planet
12 votes -
What if people were paid for their data?
14 votes -
Hard-won lessons: Five years with Node.js
4 votes -
The rise of Reddit's megathreads
I originally posted this as a comment here but thought it might deserve it's own discussion. I think that the rise of megathreads/ultrathreads/collections of threads on reddit has been a large...
I originally posted this as a comment here but thought it might deserve it's own discussion.
I think that the rise of megathreads/ultrathreads/collections of threads on reddit has been a large detriment to the site.
I'm a mod for a few large subreddits that utilizes them (and I know a good portion of people reading Tildes right now are as well), and as time goes on I've started to dislike them more and more.
At first they were great - they seemed to silo off all the posts and noise that happened around an event, and made the lives of mods easier. Posts that should've been comments could now be removed, and the user could be pointed towards the megathread. Users could go back to the post and sort by new to see new posts, and know that they'd all have to do with that one topic.
I believe that this silo actually hurts the community, and especially the discussion around that original megathread, more than it helps. As modteams I think we underestimate the resilience of our communities, and their ability to put up with "noise" around an event.
The fact that we are in a subreddit dedicated to that cause should be silo enough - each post in that subreddit should be treated as an "atomic" piece of information, with the comments being branches. By relegating all conversation to a megathread we turn top level comments into that atomic piece of information, and subcomments into the branches.
But that's just a poor implementation of the original! There are some edge cases where this might make sense (take /r/politics, it wouldn't make sense to have 9 of the top 10 posts just be slightly reworded posts on the same issues), but I think this can be remedied by better duplication rules (consider all posts on a certain topic to be a repost, unless the new post has new or different information).
There is something to be said about the ability to generate a new, blank sheet of conversation with a post, that is not marred with previous information or anecdotes. New comments on a megathread post don't have that luxury, but new posts do.
Additionally, I feel like the way reddit originally conditioned us to view posts is to view them then not check them again (unless we interacted with someone in it or got a notification). This prevents potentially great (but late) content from gaining visibility, as a non-negligible portion of the population will still be browsing the subreddit, but will never click the post again.
24 votes -
Big Tech firms march to the beat of Pentagon, CIA despite dissension
4 votes