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16 votes
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Reddit CEO Steve Huffman discusses how he wants every subreddit to be its own media company and he wants to see money being exchanged from users to users and users to subreddits
35 votes -
Reddit launches NFTs
30 votes -
The Quasi-Official 2022 r/place Atlas
12 votes -
Women are splitting off from the doomsday prepper community
19 votes -
Google search is dying: Reddit is currently the most popular search engine. The only people who don’t know that are the team at Reddit, who can’t be bothered to build a decent search interface.
41 votes -
/r/antiwork: A tragedy of sanewashing and social gentrification
19 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 -
Popular subreddit r/antiwork goes private after Fox interview
Many of you might be familiar with the popular and massively growing antiwork/work reform movement that found a home in the r/antiwork subreddit. Well, recently, the founder of the subreddit was...
Many of you might be familiar with the popular and massively growing antiwork/work reform movement that found a home in the r/antiwork subreddit. Well, recently, the founder of the subreddit was invited on Fox news for an interview and
it went about as well as you could expect(We shouldn't support r/Cringetopia) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3yUMIFYBMncSub is now private, an offshoot called /r/WorkReform has been launched and everyone hates the old mods now.
41 votes -
Life of Reddit Enhancement Suite
23 votes -
Reddit allows hate speech to flourish in its global forums, moderators say
31 votes -
Reddit is preparing to launch "Community Points" sitewide, allowing any subreddit to add a custom token to their community
5 votes -
Reddit confidentially files to go public
28 votes -
Hackers are spamming businesses’ receipt printers with ‘antiwork’ manifestos
13 votes -
IFTTT / Reddit alerts filling up with porn spam? Here’s what to do
2 votes -
Reddit adds "Community Points" on the Ethereum blockchain - used for purchases, memberships, tips, and reputation-weighted voting (in polls)
23 votes -
Ask Tildes: What alternative apps/webapps do you use to browse Reddit?
For all its flaws, Reddit is still a great news source, especially for niche areas. Unfortunately, more and more dark patterns are being added to Reddit's official site and apps. I'm reaching a...
For all its flaws, Reddit is still a great news source, especially for niche areas. Unfortunately, more and more dark patterns are being added to Reddit's official site and apps. I'm reaching a saturation point and thinking I should probably switch to an alternative way of browsing it. I see a lot of apps aimed at browsing images/GIFs. I'd like something more similar to old/compact Reddit, optimized for text without distractions, but ideally less buggy. Any recommendations?
Edit: thanks all for your answers!
16 votes -
The unbelievable grimness of /r/HermanCainAward, the subreddit that catalogs anti-vaxxer COVID deaths
30 votes -
Twitter starts to require login to view tweets
50 votes -
Reddit is quietly rolling out a TikTok-like video feed button on iOS
14 votes -
Reddit is raising up to $700M in Series F funding, at a valuation of over $10 billion
23 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 -
Reddit CryptoSnoos NFT Auction has ended; The average sale price is 131.67 ETH
10 votes -
Reddit introduces CryptoSnoos NFTs
19 votes -
Reddit is about to delete a lot of subreddits based on post activity metrics
31 votes -
Any deleted content (comments, links, threads, etc.) will now be inaccessible to moderators and the original posters of the deleted content
22 votes -
I am an object of internet ridicule, ask me anything
18 votes -
Reddit will shut down Reddit Gifts and Secret Santa at the end of 2021
34 votes -
Reddit faces lawsuit for failing to remove child sexual abuse material
15 votes -
Reddit announces "Reddit Talk," its clone of Clubhouse
23 votes -
"Why is this subreddit private?" or why some large subreddits are protesting the censorship of discussions about a reddit admin's ties to pedophilia.
38 votes -
Reddit will introduce the option for new users to add their gender identity to their accounts when signing up
21 votes -
Reddit announces online presence indicators
67 votes -
Reddit hires its first chief financial officer as it prepares for an IPO
31 votes -
History of dunking culture's transformation into the alt right, the reputation of Tumblr
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 -
Reddit: Organized lightning
13 votes -
Reddit has raised $368 million in Series E funding, at a $6 billion valuation
15 votes -
Reddit Search.io
6 votes -
Discord bans the r/WallStreetBets server
28 votes -
Storming Reddit's moat
18 votes -
I spent a year deleting my address online, then it popped up on Bing
20 votes -
Reddit buys TikTok rival Dubsmash
19 votes -
What is happening in r/CentOS and why /u/redundantly should not be a moderator
9 votes -
oklinks - a Lemmy-based meta-agreggator of link sharing sites, including Tildes
4 votes -
Teddit: A privacy-friendly Reddit frontend similar to Invidious/Bibliogram/Nitter
18 votes -
Reddit quarantined: Can changing platform affordances reduce hateful material online?
4 votes -
Evolving Reddit's workforce - Going forward, Reddit employees will mostly be able to work remotely from wherever they want, and all US employees will be paid the same, regardless of location
18 votes -
Does the Reddit 'Popular' page base results on the user's preferences?
I use Reddit more than I should. I flip to the 'Popular' page to see current events. I am curious if I am looking at skewed results based on the subreddits and posts that I visit, or if I am truly...
I use Reddit more than I should. I flip to the 'Popular' page to see current events. I am curious if I am looking at skewed results based on the subreddits and posts that I visit, or if I am truly looking at a good sample of Reddit's popular posts?
3 votes -
Reddit worries it’s going to be crushed in the fight against Big Tech
16 votes