Opinion The Fall Of Reddit: Why It’s Quickly Declining into Chaos - “You have been banned for wrongthink”

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Reddit is dead.

At least artistically and creatively speaking.

What started as a bastion of independent thought, Reddit has slowly devolved into a den of groupthink, censorship, and corporate greed.

“It’s true, both the government and private companies can censor stuff. But private companies are a little bit scarier because they have no constitution to answer to, they’re not elected really — all the protections we’ve built up against government tyranny don’t exist for corporate tyranny.
— Aaron Swartz, co-Founder of Reddit

There are three fundamental problems with Reddit:

  1. Censorship
  2. Moderator Abuse
  3. Corporate Greed
But first, you should understand that the history of Reddit doomed it from the start.

The Secret History of Reddit​

Reddit was launched in June 2005 by two 22-year-old graduates from the University of Virginia, Steve Huffman and Alexis Ohanian. The site was so small that the two co-founders had to spam links just to make Reddit seem active.

Later that year the Reddit team made arguably the most important decision of their lives: they hired a new co-founder, Aaron Swartz.

If you don’t know who Aaron Swartz was, he was a young prodigy and computer genius who, among other things, helped create RSS.

He was also an outspoken activist for free speech and open information, which made him a lot of enemies in high places.

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Eventually, Aaron left Reddit after they were bought by Conde Nast (owner of Wired Magazine), but this is when he became a complete revolutionary.

Aaron became something of a Wiki Leaks-style journ*list leaking high-level secrets against corporate power. He released countless documents including the most damaging that law professors at Stanford were receiving lobbying money from oil companies such as Exxon Mobile.

Shortly after, the FBI began monitoring Aaron Swartz and he was arrested for downloading academic journals from MIT in an attempt to make them freely available online.

They threw the book at Aaron by fining him over a million dollars, charging him with 13 felonies, and giving him a 35-year prison sentence. This was seen as an act of pure revenge by the government and because of it, Aaron Swartz took his own life at the age of 26.

“I don’t want to be happy. I just want to change the world.” — Aaron Swartz
And you know what Reddit did? They scrubbed Aaron Swartz’s name from their history. If you go to the “about” page on Reddit, it makes no mention of him whatsoever.

Aaron Swartz should be a martyr, instead, he’s been erased.

It Got Worse: Censorship​

After the death of Aaron Swartz, things only got worse for Reddit.

Newly appointed CEO Ellen Pao made an announcement, and I quote, that “Reddit is not a platform for free speech.”

This was the first step in what would be mass censorship on the platform.

In the years that followed Reddit banned over 7000 subreddits left and right in a never-ending stream of censorship. But the most controversial censorship occurred after the Orlando nightclub shooting.

After the shooting, the subreddit /r/news became a hub for people to discuss the event and share news articles. However, the mods of /r/news had a very different idea.

They began mass-deleting any posts that criticized Islam or mentioned the shooter’s motive of radical Islamic terrorism. They also banned anyone who spoke out against this censorship. Mods became power-hungry dictators, erasing anyone who dared to challenge them.

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Reddit’s Mods Are Mall Cops Slowly Killing the Platform​

Moderators on Reddit are like hall monitors who bust you for being late two seconds after the bell rang. They are the kids that ask for more homework They’re petty, they’re annoying, and they have too much power.

The mod system is completely volunteer-based which means that anyone can become a mod without any qualifications.

One of my favorite posts on Reddit had this to say about moderators:

“Mods are basically unpaid mall cops for reddit… except even mall cops know they are a joke. I think Reddit counts on the fact there are enough lonely losers out there who will moderate the site for free in exchange for the illusion of authority. These are shameful, powerless, and deeply troubled people looking to exert a measure of power anyway they can — the same kind of people who would become abusive police officers and border agents if they weren’t already so monstrously overweight.”

And because moderators are volunteer-based, they can be bribed. In fact, there have been numerous cases of mods being bribed by companies to censor certain topics or ban competing subreddits.

(Bribery taking place here, here, and here

Here is a short list of the worst most corruptable mods on Reddit:

  • /u/awkwardtheturtle (mod of multiple subreddits) was caught pinning his own posts to the top of subreddits for popularity and called all critics against him incels for no apparent reason.
  • /u/gallowboob (mod of /r/ relationship advice) would shill his friend’s marketing companies on the front page and would ban any account criticizing him.

And Finally, Corporate Greed​

I only recently found out that Ghislaine Maxwell, wife to Jeffery Epstein, ran one of the most powerful Reddit accounts on the website. In fact, it was the eighth-most popular account by karma on Reddit.

I won’t get into the implications of that — as it could be an article on its own — but it's only one case of elites having massive power on Reddit.

The bigger issue is that Reddit has several competing corporate interests.

One of them is a Chinese tech giant called Tencent which made a $150 million investment in Reddit. Tencent is the world’s biggest video game company and is notorious for selling its user’s information.

Another big investor is Sequoia Capital who was found earlier this year to be investing in corrupt companies responsible for fraudulent practices.

All of these investments have one thing in common: they’ve made the website worse for users. Now — just as I wrote about YouTube — Reddit is tailored for a better corporate experience, not a better user experience.

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Final Thoughts​

Reddit was the first social media platform I fell in love with. It’s where I found my start as a writer and it’s helped me procrastinate many late-night essays.

But it’s time to go.

It’s become a shell of its former self and something that Aaron Swartz would not be proud of. And even though Reddit is pretty much a corporate propaganda machine the users still think it’s a secret club for intellectual dynamos that “fucking love science.”

No matter what you believe in, wisdom isn’t achieved living inside a bubble of utopian ideals.

Although some of my favorite online communities are on Reddit like /r/FoodNYC or /r/OnePunchMan, for the most part, I think it’s time to move on.

https://scribe.rip/yardcouch-com/th...its-quickly-declining-into-chaos-cb0da61aca56 (A)
 
Reddit reminds me a lot of Vampire Freaks when they had their own social networking website. Back then members can become mods to enforce the rules of the site. However, most of them abused their position and the site went downhill and no longer exists except as a clothing store. Wouldn't surprise me Reddit would follow if mods keep abusing their power.
 
all the protections we’ve built up against government tyranny don’t exist for corporate tyranny.
He was right. I know I’ve said this before but when the first blade runner came out, that corporate tyranny thing was genuinely shocking. By the time the sequel came out, it had lost its edge because we are pretty much there already. Corporate overreach and power is one of the largest and worst issues we face today.
The merging of corporate and state IS the facism these people screech about, yet they support it rabidly. ten cent for example is an arm of the CCP. All large companies in china are.
 
all the protections we’ve built up against government tyranny don’t exist for corporate tyranny.
He was right. I know I’ve said this before but when the first blade runner came out, that corporate tyranny thing was genuinely shocking. By the time the sequel came out, it had lost its edge because we are pretty much there already. Corporate overreach and power is one of the largest and worst issues we face today.
The merging of corporate and state IS the facism these people screech about, yet they support it rabidly. ten cent for example is an arm of the CCP. All large companies in china are.
I'm going to Reddit akshually you, but the corporatism described in fascism has nothing to do with corporations. They both just derive from the same Latin root, corpus. Fascism wouldn't tolerate private corporations any more than Soviet communism did.
 
The merging of corporate and state IS the facism these people screech about
They call that socialism when the people they aren't against are in power.
Socialism in practice in the US is government micromanaging of megacorps/oligopolies with the assumption that "consumer protections" will be put in place and the board of directors will be on government payroll.
 
Yes, Reddit is terrible, that is why we anti-woke freedom fighters choose to host our communities on there, where we are treated as second-class citizens who have to jump through extra hoops to avoid being banned up until someone bans us on a whim anyways, we also like to smugly comment on how silly it is for countries like America and Germany to become dependent on their enemies instead of investing in our own infrastructure.
 
isn't reddit partially owned by China? they have r/sino which is basically one huge propaganda outlet for "CHINA STRONG, USA SHIT" kind of posting, and they ban any opposing views on the spot

You get banned in most subs if you say something bad about China (or China made stuff). I got banned for "sinophobia" from a car sub for sugesting that a China made knock off Garett turbo from eBay at about 1/10 the price of the real thing isn't going to give the same performance and that's best case scenario.
 
You get banned in most subs if you say something bad about China (or China made stuff). I got banned for "sinophobia" from a car sub for sugesting that a China made knock off Garett turbo from eBay at about 1/10 the price of the real thing isn't going to give the same performance and that's best case scenario.
So not only does China manufacture garbage products, they're also sensitive faggots about it.
 
isn't reddit partially owned by China? they have r/sino which is basically one huge propaganda outlet for "CHINA STRONG, USA SHIT" kind of posting, and they ban any opposing views on the spot
Yes. Tencent’s share is basically CCP rule. The whole corporate and ruling structure is riddled with malign influences domestic and foreign
 
I remember seeing a youtube video months ago some guy made that was pretty much the same shit as this but slightly more in-depth on the connections and history of the site.
I never fucking liked nor did I use reddit. I still remember back when it was starting out late 2000s/early 2010s era and there were fucking ads everywhere unironicallyclaiming it's where all the popular memes that were actually from shit like the chans and youtube originated from. I remeber everyone, even fucking tumblr was clowning on those ads (and then tumblr's owners did the same bullshit and everyone laughed at them)
Did anyone archive those ads, or is it like the fucking George of the jungle TV show game banner ads that were a meme for a while on several gaming forums and imageboards where literally the only people who are gonna know about the shit you're talking about are the people that experienced it?
 
So what is gonna replace it? A normie Kiwifarms? A new Something Awful? Nothing but more and more siloed content?

Hopefully (and get those optimistic ratings ready to go) we see a refragmenting of the Internet. Before the whole thing became some sanitised network of corporate controlled monoliths it was so much better. If the likes of Reddit, "Meta", Twitter started to die hopefully people would be smarter than just recreating the whole thing with some new corporate overlord.
 
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