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That article says Discord had 19 million users in 2019. That figure was 300 million at of the start of this year.This is the same Discord who a few years ago had a furry "moderator corruption" problem so it wouldn't be to surprising if it was found out there are some people complicit in keeping awful things around.
Discord will never be profitable.That article says Discord had 19 million users in 2019. That figure was 300 million at of the start of this year.
Makes you realize both the scale of the problem and how plausible it is that Discord LLC is capable of actively monitoring to a sufficient level. They're already struggling to turn a profit with the service, you can almost guarantee they're asleep at the wheel as far as staying on top of this shit.
The numbers are quite staggering. Apparently Discord Inc. as of late 2022 only had something like 600 employees globally so one would have to think they've outsourced a lot of the moderating efforts to individual servers and hope they can do a good job themselves, it's either that or tons of automated processes. There could be a combination of both but either way really even if the company is extremely vigilant and was quick to remove material that shouldn't be on the platform, some terrible stuff must inevitably statistically speaking slip through the cracks from time to time unfortunately.That article says Discord had 19 million users in 2019. That figure was 300 million at of the start of this year.
Makes you realize both the scale of the problem and how unlikely it is that Discord LLC is capable of actively monitoring to a sufficient level. They're already struggling to turn a profit with the service, you can almost guarantee they're asleep at the wheel as far as staying on top of this shit.
Well... Bill gates has recently (as in like a few years) has been exposed as visiting Epstien's Island several times with each explanation and story changing.I wouldn't be surprised at all to see one of the big 'household name' tech ppl to be arrested within the next year with something so horrific that it will change how we'll view the whole internet.
What worries me here is that at the global and server level, moderation is probably successful at controlling the worst and most overt stuff - Sharing of CSAM, open child abuse, flagrant violations of law in it's many forms (e.g. organizing drug buys).The scale is quite staggering. Apparently Discord Inc. as of late 2022 only had something like 600 employees globally so one would have to think they've outsourced a lot of the moderating efforts to individual servers and hope they can do a good job themselves, it's either that or tons of automated processes. There could be a combination of both but either way really even if the company does have some secret bad actors within it internally or not some terrible stuff must inevitably statistically speaking slip through the cracks unfortunately.
And therein lies a large part of the problem - You have a service provider that's already not making money despite only performing the bare minimum of oversight. It's against their interests to even acknowledge that this problem exists. They're going to keep tacitly allowing the problem to worsen, and increasingly so as they struggle to remain afloat. Kinda like how Uber et al seemed at first to undercut traditional taxi services with no downsides, until it soon came to light that all the shit they were omitting in the name of running a leaner service meant various safety measures, like vetting out felons so lone women don't get raped at 2am in some random 'cab', were part of the fat that was cut.Discord will never be profitable.
Internet-based startups with a generous free service have always struggled to be profitable with their main product. The only way you'll see internet services like Discord, YouTube, Spotify, Twitch and Uber actually "profit" is through secondary investments in other services that are profitable, stock-market plays or shifting money around (cooking the books) to make things look better.
Anything that requires process intensive operations (WebRTC/audio/video streaming is extremely costly) absolutely blows out costs. I've done some work for clients that have required WebRTC stuff before and it's mind boggling how expensive things get at scale.
MicroStrategy is a great example of this. They sell products and services, but were making a fucking fortune off Bitcoin investing (the classic Michael Saylor story).
The numbers are quite staggering. Apparently Discord Inc. as of late 2022 only had something like 600 employees globally so one would have to think they've outsourced a lot of the moderating efforts to individual servers and hope they can do a good job themselves, it's either that or tons of automated processes. There could be a combination of both but either way really even if the company is extremely vigilant and was quick to remove material that shouldn't be on the platform, some terrible stuff must inevitably statistically speaking slip through the cracks from time to time unfortunately.
I can maybe help you out there - I remember when that stuff started.Green - seems to be social club type servers without a strong common theme in the naming. Lots of mentions of "club" "cafe" "hangout" etc
This reminds me of Kik. I'm not sure how old people are here but if you're around my age you probably remember Kik blowing up when you were a teenager. If anyone reading doesn't remember it, it filled kinda the same role as Discord, a simple free messenger that had features that made it convenient to use.And therein lies a large part of the problem - You have a service provider that's already not making money despite only performing the bare minimum of oversight. It's against their interests to even acknowledge that this problem exists. They're going to keep tacitly allowing the problem to worsen, and increasingly so as they struggle to remain afloat. Kinda like how Uber et al seemed at first to undercut traditional taxi services with no downsides, until it soon came to light that all the shit they were omitting in the name of running a leaner service meant various safety measures, like vetting out felons so lone women don't get raped at 2am in some random 'cab', were part of the fat that was cut.
Kind of an old article - https://www.cnbc.com/2021/05/08/wha...-fosters-community-expands-beyond-gaming.htmlIt used to be that Discord was nothing but gaming stuff (in fact, when you downloaded it the program description was "gamers' chat"). I'm disgusted to see from your server grouping diagram that this is now a small fringe of what the program is used for. I'm also interested in how this happened - whether it was organic or if the company made a conscious attempt to "widen the userbase by broadening the appeal". Anyone know?
The numbers are quite staggering. Apparently Discord Inc. as of late 2022 only had something like 600 employees globally so one would have to think they've outsourced a lot of the moderating efforts to individual servers and hope they can do a good job themselves, it's either that or tons of automated processes.
I'm more interested in where the troon gooners are interacting outside of their gross cumservers. Either way, this is really informative and cool to see.This would be an objectively terrible idea if you want to see this data go towards anything remotely useful or meaningful.
Crime stats already give you the answer to that question anyways.
No fucking way it's anything but Discord. Those guys are terminally online.I'm more interested in where the troon gooners are interacting outside of their gross cumservers. Either way, this is really informative and cool to see.
Honestly a few of these don't sound like zoophilia, but just edgy comments out of context. This one could easily about somebody talking about members of the religion of peace, for example. I'd not rely on anything llama powered to understand context and subtlety too well, to be entirely honest with you. Not yet, anyways - and purple llama is really, really new. I'm not saying that there isn't ton of sex pests on discord, but I'm not sure I'd trust data like this fully yet. Even just a tiny bias towards false positives can skew data like this terribly.got bored of fucking goats
0.96359253
Of course, I'm wondering where else within Discord.No fucking way it's anything but Discord. Those guys are terminally online.
You can try scoring the outcomes asymmetrically, for example punishing a false negative more than a false positive, to reflect the fact positives are rare but "critical". Sorta how you train models on detecting cancer from X-rays.It keeps falling into local minima where it decides the best course of action is to simply pick a low score for every piece of text, since that still gets it >99% correct answers.
Oh right, I would suspect group chats within the direct messaging space, so that it's easy to delete from your client quickly if need be. Not sure about Discord's data retention on those groups, I'd imagine deleting a group doesn't actually drop any rows from their system.Of course, I'm wondering where else within Discord.