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23 votes
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Reddit announces new limits on moderating large subreddits and for moderators to remove content sitewide
72 votes -
Reddit will block the Internet Archive
58 votes -
I've noticed an odd and possibly disturbing trend on Reddit lately
I'm not sure where to bring this up and I wanted an outside perspective. This may seem like I'm doing the same thing here but I honestly just want to know if anyone has any insight. The trend in...
I'm not sure where to bring this up and I wanted an outside perspective. This may seem like I'm doing the same thing here but I honestly just want to know if anyone has any insight. The trend in talking about is the act of creating a reddit post in the form of a question. I've seen so many posts on Reddit popup that are just questions or screenshots/pictures with a question as the title.
For instance in gaming subreddits I'll see a post with the title of something like "What do you think is the best game in X series?" And they will have a screenshot of what would be the perceived most popular game in a franchise like final fantasy or halo or something. This is only one example, I see so many questions constantly in my home feed.
Is this some kind of concerted effort to train an LLM or is it simply some unspoken advantage that karma farmers use to drive engagement? Or am I simply just diving into conspiracy theories created by my own ignorance?
44 votes -
Reddit in talks to embrace Sam Altman's iris-scanning Orb to verify users
40 votes -
Reddit sues Anthropic, alleging its bots accessed Reddit more than 100,000 times
28 votes -
Have I been conversing with bots or humans?
I've been on reddit (yes, Im embarrassed that I haven't quit the cocaine) for about 15 years now. The changes in the last year or so have been noticeable. For one thing, the worst of the ranting...
I've been on reddit (yes, Im embarrassed that I haven't quit the cocaine) for about 15 years now. The changes in the last year or so have been noticeable.
For one thing, the worst of the ranting trolls are gone. I used to occasionally get some replies from people who obviously were just out to get a reaction, usually by swearing and name calling with the kind of grammar skills you'd expect from an angry 9 yr old who just discovered how to log on. Those have largely disappeared. But I have a hard time believing that trolls are gone off the net, so is it just better moderation? Or has reddit just implemented more auto rules that squelch the noisy juvenile behavior?
Secondly, Ive noticed the discussions becoming much more detailed. It was typical, especially in political subs, to see the only comments that got strongly upvoted, were short quips, the more smart ass the better, and then for those to be followed by a long succession of similar quips. That still happens, but Ive noticed a lot more lengthy discussion with redditors actually disovering they can create paragraphs and debate more maturely. Is that a change in human behavior? Or are those not likely humans?
And some behavior really has me suspicious. In particular I have gotten the same reply several times to a comment. It will say, "Thank you for sharing your comment, I appreciate it. Could you tell me more about your _______?". This COULD be a human, but the fact that it always starts the same and then asks me for further engagement really has me wondering, if for no other reason than I dont recall the average redditor being that polite.
Ive also noted some strange comment patterns. Yesterday I interacted with a poster and then checked their post history. Over 10,000 comments and they were ALL in the last few months during the run up to the Canadian election and ALL were against one party. Only 4 posts but 10,000 comments?. If there are NO posts in any other sub that seems very suspicious. Either a bot or someone hired to do as much damage as possible?
Reddit has changed. Its now publicly owned. And like all other social media it lives on engagement so I have no doubt that it will do whatever it takes with AI bots to keep people online and engaged. But how good are they? I just hate being 'taken for a ride' by a bot and a company. But how do you ever know if its a human or a bot you're talking to?
45 votes -
Researchers secretly ran a massive, unauthorized AI persuasion experiment on Reddit users
64 votes -
Digg is relaunching under Kevin Rose and Alexis Ohanian
54 votes -
Repeatedly upvoting violent content on Reddit can now get you flagged
58 votes -
The terrorist propaganda to Reddit pipeline
18 votes -
Reddit will lock some content behind a paywall this year, CEO says
90 votes -
Another post about bulk deleting content from Reddit
Is there a utility that will bulk delete threads and comments I made, but from 1 subreddit only? Thanks for any clues.
16 votes -
Don't contribute anything relevant in web forums like Reddit
30 votes -
Reddit is profitable for the first time ever, with nearly 100 million daily users
51 votes -
[SOLVED] Looking for help linking to a specific comment on Reddit
Hi, Thanks for looking at this. There is a specific comment in a reddit conversation that I want to share in a few different places. It's important to me. I tried this a few years ago when I...
Hi,
Thanks for looking at this. There is a specific comment in a reddit conversation that I want to share in a few different places. It's important to me.
I tried this a few years ago when I wanted to participate in r/bestof and I could not make sense of the instructions that they provided.
I am not a technologically skilled person but I have learned a few tricks using markdown while participating here on tildes.
Can someone please give advice and possibly help me troubleshoot ? I will be returning to my computer and hopefully trying out suggestions about four hours from the time stamp on this post.
8 votes -
Reddit moderators will now have to submit a request to switch their subreddit from public to private
68 votes -
Some subreddits could be paywalled, hints Reddit CEO
64 votes -
Reddit CEO says Microsoft needs to pay to search the site
46 votes -
Google now only search engine allowed to provide results from Reddit
88 votes -
Reddit won't allow me to delete my comments
I have, despite my better judgement, gone back on reddit in a limited way after exiting completely for a few months. I decided to anonymize myself as much as possible and was using Redact to cover...
I have, despite my better judgement, gone back on reddit in a limited way after exiting completely for a few months. I decided to anonymize myself as much as possible and was using Redact to cover my history. It overwrites comments with random words plus a short message that the comment has been anonymized and deleted with Redact. It's been working great for quite a few months.
Today I logged on for the first time in a few days and my comments have ALL been restored, right back to when I opened a new account a few months ago after closing my ten year old account. Everything is there again.
Not sure reddit's point in restoring them, other than a stark reminder that comments and personal info mining is the point of reddit, not community engagement, just like all the other social media.
Curious if anyone has any idea on how to permanently delete comment history?
33 votes -
/r/nixos enables automated moderation with Watchdog
16 votes -
Vibe Check - Let AI find you the best things
30 votes -
Reddit shares soar 14% after company reports revenue pop in debut earnings report
32 votes -
Reddit inks partnership with ChatGPT owner OpenAI
26 votes -
Reddit, AI spam bots explore new ways to show ads in your feed
61 votes -
Reddit pops as much as 70% in NYSE debut after selling shares at top of range
37 votes -
US judge rules YouTube, Facebook and Reddit must face lawsuits claiming they helped radicalize a mass shooter
47 votes -
Can Reddit survive its own IPO?
22 votes -
Reddit is letting power users in on its IPO
38 votes -
Google cut a deal with Reddit for AI training data
23 votes -
Reddit has a new AI training deal to sell user content
67 votes -
I got a spam call and the automated voice that requests their reasoning for calling was my voice AI generated
13 votes -
How social media’s biggest user protest rocked Reddit
80 votes -
Reddit moderators of r/law and r/scotus filed an amicus brief in US Supreme Court first amendment case Moody v NetChoice LLC
62 votes