Reddit changes the rules to make sitewide protests much more difficult. Moderators will now have to get admin approval when switching a subreddit from public to private or when adding a NSFW tag.
Not sure on the technicals but lots of rate limiting to prevent PDS from being able to get everything and outright shenanigans to make posts not appear in the old view which also prevents PDS from deleting them. Not to mention un-deleting comments after a while (even if you use the option to edit before deleting).
So run it early and run it often. And then just delete the account for the rest.
A dev here. Not a reddit dev, but a dev. Deleting thing online doesn't necessarily mean real deletion of the content. For instance, every post and comment is a row of a "big notebook" (a table on a database) and every row is split by columns for specific data: who's the author, where it was posted (which community), what's the content and, sometimes, a yes/no column called "is it deleted?". When you delete such post, you are writing a "yes" inside that column, without actually replacing the content. It's an oversimplified explanation of how platforms register posts, sometimes there's a "version" table (think of it as multiple notebooks keeping track of different things simultaneously) that will keep the different versions of an edited post/comment, so they will remain intact inside such table.
Tl;dr: once on the internet, always on the internet (unfortunately). Especially if we're dealing with a corporation that profits over user's data. Rare cases where a thing on the internet finds real oblivion.
Might be better to replace old posts with links to the fediverse. Or since those are probably filtered "Google search 'Reddit alternatives' and look for the mouse..." or some shit like that.
Would do so but they bring back allot of posts, and besides I deleted my account. I couldn't take them making it more and more difficult for me to do what I enjoyed on the site.
Sorry; the above is mandatory these days when talking about enshittified reddit.
I'd say it very strongly looks like Spez is doing exactly what it looks like. I can attest from my days as a meta-subreddit-mod and reddit mod that this behavior tracks exactly with any time Spez thinks he's planning an unpopular change; they pucker up hard and start bracing things they think will be affected.
Probably, it is Old.Reddit; because it likely does not add to their revenue. Old.reddit interface was not designed with advertising in mind and it is purely functional first only.
Of course; by editing or removing old.reddit interfaces; they will be lobotomizing their moderation teams. The new reddit interface provides far less control and granular information; making it difficult at times to moderate without falling back to the old.reddit interface.
Undoubtedly they will likely also try to freeze, disable, or cripple AutoModerator /config/ pages, if they haven't already, or revert them as well when this new enshittification masquerading as a "small positive change" drops. It's hard to say.
Instead of recognizing their moderators as major stakeholders who have chosen to build their communities on reddit; they have chosen violence, and are treating them like enslaved serfs. Hmm...I wonder if that means they could possibly be breaking modern slavery laws... Until Next Time!
The funny thing is this will do absolutely nothing to prevent a sitewide protest. There are so many ways for mods to effectively destroy a subreddit or redirect it while remaining public.
In fact, and this is the important blindness that Reddit continues to have, the mods usually need to work hard daily just to keep a sub usable. Reddit is so dismissive of that effort and so brazenly presumes upon their volunteer labor that they seem to think subs just continue on sheer momentum, if only they could stop mods from sabotaging them.
Mod posts every day pointing to a new community at Lemmy or elsewhere, stopping using bot removal tools, stopping troll culling, marking NSFW, etc will do the job.
Well they don’t want to hurt the feelings of the nazis they protect. Keep reminding them that 400 thousand Americans died in WW2 to give us the right to punch nazis in the face.
dunno, for 16 months now, the only time I went there was after a google search and the answer was in a reddit thread... There is 15+ years of answers to various obscur topics and all, "unfortunately"
They're starting to get stale though. Sometimes yes, there will be a 15+ years old thread that's still relevant, but there will also be so many cases that the latest post is 2+ years old and no longer applicable or outdated.
I really need to stop looking at stuff like this because it really makes the intrusive thoughts of wanting to murder people go slightly elevated in my mind.
All 10 of us here stand united on this most exquisite and elevated of horses!
It's so weird to be content with/amused by this situation. Feels like Alexandria was just built nextdoor, fisherman have started to arrived with massive boats and high-quality nets, and here we are, the old fishermen pushed off our original fishing site yet full of glee that we don't have to pay taxes in Alexandria. It's like, this isn't really a successful venture, right? We're not really thriving like we were in the past, are we? We're likely never going to get anything like that back either, huh
Idk, maybe my values just don't give me enough internal validation yet, to feel good about it or something. The only consolation I see really is that I don't think the time spent online is very worthwhile anyway. What I liked most was the community but it's become clear most of that was never real
All 10 of us here stand united on this most exquisite and elevated of horses!
It’s like, this isn’t really a successful venture, right? We’re not really thriving like we were in the past, are we? We’re likely never going to get anything like that back either, huh
It's always the people with 0 post submissions complaining about this. It's always someone else's responsibility to create communities and find the content to fill them and it’s never enough. Just imagine how much more active the Lemmy side of the Fediverse would be if everyone submitted one article, meme, video, or podcast, etc. a day in some niche community of their choosing. But hey, I guess shitting on the opportunity we have to start fresh is a lot easier than committing to contribute to the slow but organic growth of another news aggregate.
I shit on the opportunity? Dude, I don't think you understood my comment at all, especially since you got so defensive in your response.
Let's try and take a breath and relax. Let me know if something I said hurt/disrespected you and I'll address it since it wasn't my intention to offend anyone.
First, I visit Lemmy daily and comment all the time. Am I not a true Lemmy user because I don't post? I personally think that's a silly thing to say.
Second, I never even mentioned the posts here being the issue. You just assumed that, dude. My issue is entirely the lack of people. Sorry that wasn't clearer in my what I wrote
Finally, if I'm honest, I don't think this place is better than reddit. It may one day be but I don't think it is yet. I hope I'm allowed to have that opinion here.
Something else I think is that the demographic of the userbase is a lot more similar/less diverse than it ever was on reddit. Again, I'm not even saying that's a good or bad thing. They're just realities we should try and understand. It could be both. I just find the hate for reddit to be over the top and I think it clouds people's view of reality. You're welcome to disagree. We could even have a nice chat about it!
I'm of the belief that if we want this place to be better than reddit we need to truly try and welcome people we disagree with into the community so everyone feels like they're included even if they're not always posting or commenting or even visiting or whatever. ;)
I mean, maybe I should just ask, are people here mainly for a defederated social network - and what does that mean to you? I've kinda always been looking for a good healthy community - I hear the Internet used to be way better at that before - and I felt like reddit showed that their communities were fake and ripe for turning on themselves. This place seems identical in that way.
Sorry if I could've communicated that better in this message or the last one