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2 yr. ago

  • Cats rubbing their face on something leave their scent behind / mark their territory, so yes, in a way they're claiming ownership. However, your cat isn't saying "this item is mine now" with this message, but rather likes to leave its own scent on items that also smell like you, as they associate it with something comforting and safe. It is more like a "this thing smells like my human and I want other cats to know that we belong together" scenario.

    As for why the TV remote of all things: you're holding that thing in your hand, and your palms have a lot of special sweat glands that do not react to heat but rather emotions. Humans get sweaty palms when stressed or exited and your cat is basically able to "read" these emotions in items that you held in your hands. If you're relaxed and comfortable while switching through the channels, the TV remote will basically smell like "my favorite human is happy" to your cat. ;)

  • No idea about any official definitions for this, but one of my coworkers exclusively drinks sparkling water as she hates the taste of "plain" water, and since she hasn't dropped dead yet, I'd wager that it hydrates you enough to count ;)

  • WTF is 80oz…

    Not OP, but 80oz = eigthy ounces = roughly 2.4 liter

  • That's some really "spez"ial thinking process right here.

    1. Realize that Reddit needs more traffic and users ASAP
    2. Randomly block access to content
    3. ???
    4. Profit!

    ... seriously ... any site that greets me with pop-ups like "we noticed you're using an adblocker" and stupid captchas and the like gets closed immediatly, and if I need to subscribe / join just to read what some rando on the internet wrote 6 years ago then I'm just going to look for that info elsewhere. Does spez really think that reddit is so incredible and awesome that people would WANT to log in / create an account when confronted with this bullsh*t?

  • The longer I stare at it, the worse it gets ...

  • I understand that, but the "dubious" comment would still appear in the comment thread on both instances then, and that can turn into a problem. How do you deal with it?

    Just to make an example: I moderate a community about Breath of the Wild, where content about the sequel Tears of the Kingdom are discouraged so that people who don't own that game yet won't have to worry about spoilers. There are also communities about both games, or even just the sequel, where "spoilers" simply aren't an issue. Now imagine someone makes a post that appears in both communities, and the comment section contains content related to the sequel. How would you deal with it?

    • Remove the comments about the sequel because the BotW community doesn't allow spoilers? That's a surefire way to piss off anyone subscribed to the TotK community, because they were simply discussing content they're subscribed to and won't understand what they did wrong or why their comments keep disappearing.
    • Let the comments stay because the TotK community allows them? That's a surefire way to piss off people subscribed to the BotW sub, as they were promised a spoiler-free browsing experience and now read about stuff they didnt want to read about. You cannot un-see spoilers, so "just deal with it" isn't an option.
    • Make it so that those comments are only displayed in the TotK community but not in the BotW community? That's what we have right now - separate comment sections for each community. If you merge the comment sections and then retroactively have to sort out which comments are or are not displayed in the other sub, it will be an unneccessary extra workload for the mods as you can barely automate such a thing. And you would have to check every comment again as soon as someone makes a crosspost to a third, fourth, fifth community, as this would add extra rules that would make comments that were formerly comepletely fine suddenly not okay anymore.

    Now this is an example where the issue are "just" gameplay spoilers, so it's not exactly the end of the world. But once this happens to communities with different rulesets about politics, religion, NSFW content, things that are illegal in one country but not the other, and similar highly explosive topics, it will turn into a moderation nightmare to keep the comment section fair for everyone.

  • This sounds good in theory, but it's going to be difficult if the communities have different rules. A comment made on the post in Community 1 might be okay IN Community 1 but innappropiate in Community 2 ... how would you deal with this if the comment section was merged and appeared in both communties?

  • Maybe some future feature could combine them

    Crossposting already exists. That way you have one "main post" and a couple of openly linked crossposts in other communities that redirect to the main post, which makes it easy to filter out "duplicates" as the posts are already bundled in a way. There is no reason to make the same "main post" multiple times.

    ...and if you meant to combine the comment sections across all communities and instances into a single big comment cluster linked to the main post, then please keep in mind that different communities have different rules. A comment made from a user in Community 1 might be appropiate in Community 1 but inappropiate in Community 2 where the post also appears. How would you moderate this if all comments appeared in both Community 1 and 2 at the same time?

  • The community wasn't set to private anymore during that time tho: r/breath_of_the_wild reopened immediatly after the protests.

  • I am talking about comments that I manually deleted tho. I saved certain comments first before deleting so I know that they're the same ones that I manually nuked.

    Just an example: https://www.reddit.com/r/Breath_of_the_Wild/comments/mzcqja/comment/gw13ppt/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web3x&utm_name=web3xcss&utm_term=1&utm_content=share_button

    The answer to that post is mine, and I saved that comment because I wanted to use it for a guide later. It was definitely DELETED the day I closed my account, and it is the 1:1 same text as the saved comment, so I defo didn't just confuse it with a different / similar comment.

    Please ELI5 to me how it is "just a limitation of their database" that this comment exists, even tho it did originally pop up in the comment list AND was deleted.

    PS: this is just one example of many many others - a whole lot of my longer in-depth comments are simply back again. And that sub was no longer set to "private" during that time.

  • I manually deleted everything reddit chose to show in my profile over the course of a week. I only stopped once absolutely NO comments or posts were shown in "new" reddit, old.reddit, and all types of sorting (old,new,top,hot,controversial). Waited an additional day and then checked again, just to make sure I really got everything. There simply was nothing left in my profile anymore.

    Afterwards(!) I used "shreddit" and it found nearly a thousand effing more things to delete (981 comments to be precise). Ran it twice, and the second go didn't find any more comments or posts.

    My account is deleted now, and I can STILL find comments that are definitely mine but no longer attributed to my account (it says [deleted] where the username originally was) but since the account no longer exists, I can not edit/delete them again.

    There is definitely something fishy with that site.

  • I know it's annoying that the password "doesn't match", but ... a 128 character limit?! I'd like to see THAT fully utilized lol.

    (PS: the sentence above is exactly 128 characters, just for a comparison.)

    ...and I bet once you want to change it you get the "your new password can not be the old password" error message just because.

  • Fun Fact: "Mist" is German for "manure". And they did not change the title for the German release.

    Make of that information what you want.

    EDIT: I just remembered that it was called "Myst" ... still the same pronounciation.

  • German here. My last employer was visibly confused when I told him that I neither have a Whatsapp account nor a smartphone, and didn't want either one. Apparently it was his preferred way of changing shifts last minute and he was pissed that I didn't want to participate in that bullshit. So you want to send me a notification after effing midnight that I have to come in at 5 AM instead of 6 AM? Miss me with that shit.

    Luckily I found a better job elsewhere (and they do NOT require any social media accounts - if they want to change something, they call me and ASK whether I am ok with it).

  • I hope this doesn't come across as rude, but as someone who has an aunt that behaves VERY similar, I can only say that some people do not want solutions - they want to be mad about something and others to agree with them. Finding easy ways to remove the problem instead of being allowed to complain about it is the opposite of what they expect to achieve.

  • Solo, capable devs usually care for the product they create and the community they form way more than for the profits they promised their shareholders - they pour love and time and creativity into something they enjoy and want to share with the rest of the world, they listen to feedback and adress concerns, and that does make a huge difference.

    Spez on the other hand cares only for how much cash he can squeeze out of reddit by any means, whether it hurts the "product" or its users in the long run or not. There is no "love and care" for reddit and redditors, just corporate greed.

  • Took them long enough. To be honest, I'm surprised that this extremely obvious ripoff was even greenlit in the first place.

  • First thing that came to mind while looking at this "cookie" ...

    1. This would give reddit a ton of free traffic
    2. There are already a thousand comments, posts, signatures etc. advertising the Fediverse
    3. It will get overwritten by something else eventually anyway

    Don't get me wrong; I like the idea of advertising the Fediverse per se, but not if this means that hundreds of people have to interact with their site to get ONE temporary message across. It is better to just stop interacting with reddit completely IMHO.

  • It boosts traffic during a time a lot of ex-redditors scraped/nuked worthwile content and left. If people are annoyed and want to show that off, but they can only change a single pixel every-so-often, then they will refresh / check the site VERY often to make sure their hard-earned single-pixel contribution isn't overwritten by someone else.

    I wouldn't be surprised if that was one of the reasons, trying to profit from the agitated masses somehow.