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55
Joined
2 yr. ago

  • Can't really comment for certain on OP's behalf, but they did say "in a realm that has a lot of drama"

    "In a realm" makes it sound like it's not just their non-profit that's at fault, but is a common issue across all non-profits working in that same field/realm

  • I do think there is some element of abuse, (i.e. "landed gentry") but definitely not on par with an intimate relationship. Comparable, but not anywhere near equivalent.

    I think the sunk cost can be compared to a gambling addiction. You lose money, you know the casinos are designed to make you lose money on average, yet people chase after losses all the same.

    Casinos are an investment of money, and moderation is an investment of time. A gambler could just leave the casino after suffering a loss, and a Reddit mod could leave Reddit after suffering from this blatant abuse from the admins. But with addicts, you'll always have that itch, that voice in the back of your head telling you to stay or go back.

    Some people are more prone to these urges and can't resist. Gambling addicts exist. It's a serious problem, and I have a close friend who suffered from this very addiction. I'd consider many of these mods to suffer from a similar, albeit lesser form of this brand of addiction.

    Either way, I agree that it's something that should be pitied, and disagree with the idea that "it's not that serious."

  • Yeah I was gonna say. I'm guessing OP meant cryptocurrencies in particular, but you're not wrong. Federated services are an example of Web3 as well, since Web3 is defined by decentralization, which is the core premise of Lemmy

    So I absolutely agree, lambasting Web3 as a whole is rather disingenuous

  • While I can see federated video channels being a thing, would advertising be possible on it, at least in the same capacity as YouTube? Because from my understanding, a lot of channels are only able to exist the way they do because it's a career for the channel owner. They can make a living off it, and in turn, they can dedicate their full time to the channel, rather than treat it as a hobby.

    Would ads be provided by a different service? And wouldn't we see the same thing with Reddit, where the existing community is so big that people are scared to use something that may not reach as many people? With forums, its one thing, but when the aim is to make it big and potentially make a living off of videos, that might discourage people more.

  • Buy upvotes?

    The sad part is, I can absolutely see this happening. Not as an outright "gib money get updoot" but something more roudabout but effectively the same thing.

    "Be heard louder with Reddit Premium! Your comments on posts will be displayed closer to the top for others to see!"

    To reiterate, the above is just something I mocked up. May not be upvotes, but still rigging threads by paying Reddit money. I just wouldn't be surprised at this point.

  • If chat is what I'm thinking of (the private DM feature), then I used it once or twice. Namely, when I wanted to send a link/file to users in a community where posting links or files were not allowed, or being on the receiving end of that, wanting to privately message someone asking for something.

    Tbh, it's not a system that needs to be overhauled and enhanced. It should just do the bare minimum of letting people privately message each other in a more streamlined format (a chat, as opposed to the equivalent of sending e-mails back and forth)

  • Never really was a fan of the copious amount of awards to begin with. Gold and Silver were fine enough, and they got a point across. If I saw them on a post or comment, I'd have an indicator that someone really liked it, and wanted to praise it beyond giving it an upvote. Silver and Gold were two tiers to this, which coupled with upvotes, was more than sufficient in giving users a metric by which to value posts or comments.

    It turned to shit when I start seeing diamond-clad medals, seal heads, unicorns and rainbows, and shooting stars flying across my screen. It took the simple approach and turned it into a clusterfuck of visual noise because the people designing them had no clue about the basics of a user interface.

    And then they kill the entire thing because (shocker) it just doesn't work. Typical.

  • I may be in the minority on this, but I wear pants to work every day, even in the summer, and it doesn't feel uncomfortable. I just like wearing my jeans, and if anything, I've gotten more flak from friends about not wearing shorts enough

  • Man, I absolutely love System of a Down. At the very least, I'm happy that those 6-7 years produced so many bangers

  • It's a username I've used since a decade ago, probably. I used it typically for gaming, with XYZ being used in arcade style games where you can only input 3 characters, and Inferno being used for anything where I could enter a full name with no regard to uniqueness. Also, inferno is my favorite word in the English lexicon So I just combined the two, and it's never taken on any platform I sign up for

  • 21 yo software dev here, so not quite older, but I'd say I fit the tech nerd bill lmao

    While a lot of people are conscious about the software they use, I think being involved in tech, either as a hobby or career, ups the chance that a person will care about things like user privacy, how an app is run, algorithms that might manipulate the user, or even how technologically literate the rest of the community is

    And that isn't to be condescending towards people who are more apathetic about it. It's like how a doctor might be more behooved to eat healthy; when you've seen and studied what can go wrong, you're more compelled to avoid it

  • I've noticed my feed can look stagnant if I go by the default, which is Local and Active. I instead set it to Subscribed and New

    On Reddit, New wasn't the best since posts were made so quick and a lot of them were low-effort, but at least in the communities I'm subbed to, posts are generally made slower, but are higher quality, making sorting by new valid.

  • Hah, this is just so pathetic to read.

    I don't use the term "terminally online" often, but this is exactly the time to use it. Imagine being this desperate to cling onto your power over an internet forum, not even for the sake of the community, but for the ego-driven lust for wanting control over others on something as menial as Reddit.

    Must be a shock to realize all this was in his head, and he was basically just a pawn to spez and everyone else at the top.

  • Holy hell

  • Keep in mind too that the expiration date for many of the mainstream third party Reddit apps is June 30

    Just think of the spike in users when that rolls around in 10 days