• TVA@thebrainbin.org
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    17 days ago

    One of the mods said (in the article) that to their knowledge it’s mostly the paid admins removing it not the unpaid moderators.

    • Windex007@lemmy.world
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      17 days ago

      The quote I was referencing is this:

      “People - Please don’t make the life of your mods a living hell. Anything that is celebrating violence is going to get taken down - if not from us, then from reddit. I think all the mods understand that there is a high level of frustration and antipathy towards insurance and insurance execs, but we also understand that murdering people in the streets is not good. We are a public group of medical professionals, we still need to act like that.”

      The line about making their lives a living hell?

      If you ever feel the need to type that in reference to your volunteer Reddit moderation… Stand up, go outside.

      • piecat@lemmy.world
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        17 days ago

        Imagine letting an unpaid position on social media “make life hell”

      • Optional@lemmy.world
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        17 days ago

        Well, first of all fuck reddit, but secondly: if you appreciate actual human moderation in any significant sense - it’s hard work.

        Getting paid to do it is rare (again - fuck reddit, they should get off of there) but on any site that’s actually trying to honestly build or host a community it takes time to check the reports, message the people, log the entry all that shit. It’s a huge pain in the ass when something blows up, which is why neither you or I will likely ever be mods. When it’s the scale of reddit it’s bound to be a lot of scrambling until shit cools off again.

        • Windex007@lemmy.world
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          17 days ago

          To be honest, I actually don’t really appreciate human moderation, so that’s probably biasing my position.

          I can block communities. I can block users. I can set word filters.

          If I block someone, I never have to hear from them again. If a moderator does, they’ll be back with a new account, and then I DO have to hear from them.

          I’d far prefer a “federated” and crowdsourced mechanism to layer onto an extremely lightly moderated foundational layer.

          If someone, or someones, want to curate a filter list that aligns with my sensibilities, awesome, I’ll opt in. I’ll contribute. If I bump into unresolvable issues with other filter curators I’ll fork the filter.

          I don’t need or want a tiny subset of users working full time for free getting burnt out or going on power trip crusades.

      • sunzu2@thebrainbin.org
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        17 days ago

        we also understand that murdering people in the streets is not good.

        Cute of yout to assume plebs think of this guy as a human…

        I am not sure about others bit I see a high ranking officer within corpo regime got taken out.

        Do we cry when cartel members gets wacked?

        • Shdwdrgn@mander.xyz
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          17 days ago

          If someone is directly responsible for the deaths of millions of people and the courts hold the position that corporate profits outweigh human life, then yeah eventually someone is going to take matters into their own hands. The real question is, will this become a trend? For example, would anyone really be upset if all the would-be school shooters look at this as an example of how their frustrations could be used to make a real difference in the world? Imagine if CEOs were suddenly afraid of real-world consequences when their greed hurts people?