How to Report a Subreddit on Reddit Desktop and Mobile Alright, when it comes to platforms like Reddit that host a diverse variety of communities, talks & discussions never seem to take a break. And hence, factors such as order and respect become a priority. However, you might find a subreddit that goes too far and violates the rules & guidelines set by the platform. In such cases, you have the option to report and get the subreddit or users who abuse banned from Reddit. We will show you how to do the same, let’s get started.
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How to Report a Subreddit on Reddit Desktop and Mobile Alright, when it comes to platforms like Reddit that host a diverse variety of communities, talks & discussions never seem to take a break. And hence, factors such as order and respect become a priority. However, you might find a subreddit that goes too far and violates the rules & guidelines set by the platform. In such cases, you have the option to report and get the subreddit or users who abuse banned from Reddit. We will show you how to do the same, let’s get started. https://lnkd.in/e_xZedx8
How to Report a Subreddit on Reddit Desktop and Mobile
https://neoxtech.net
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Reddit suffers a major outage after thousands of subreddits temporarily shut down It's been quite a day for Reddit. Thousands of communities have temporarily closed shop to protest changes the company is making to its API, which is impacting several third-party apps. On top of that, the platform suffered a "major outage" across its desktop and mobile websites, as well as the mobile apps. "We're aware of problems loading content and are working to resolve the issues as quickly as possible," read a message on the Reddit status page as of 10:58AM ET. By 11:30AM, the site was loading again. "A significant number of subreddits shifting to private caused some expected stability issues, and we’ve been working on resolving the anticipated issue," Reddit told Engadget in a statement. A bot was tracking all of the subreddits that were going private as part of the protests. As you might expect, the bot was out of commission while Reddit was down, but it's up and running again.Subscribe to the Engadget Deals NewsletterGreat deals on consumer electronics delivered straight to your inbox, curated by Engadget’s editorial team. See latestPlease enter a valid email addressPlease select a newsletterBy subscribing, you are agreeing to Engadget's Terms and Privacy Policy. Reddit said in April...
Reddit suffers a major outage after thousands of subreddits temporarily shut down
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Last week, Reddit published our Transparency Report for the second half of 2023, which shares data and insights about our content moderation and legal requests from July through December 2023. Reddit’s biannual Transparency Reports provide insights and metrics about content that was removed from Reddit – including content proactively removed as a result of automated tooling, accounts that were suspended, and legal requests we received from governments, law enforcement agencies, and third parties from around the world to remove content or disclose user data. An interesting data point for this network – We’ve actually seen overall decreases in global government and law enforcement legal requests to remove content or disclose account information compared to the first half of 2023. Read more in our report. https://lnkd.in/gAX49hFW I am very proud of the amazing work that our trust and safety, legal and other internal teams are doing to keep Reddit users safe and provide transparency about our efforts!
Transparency Report: July to December 2023
redditinc.com
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Google is facing a major problem with Reddit. In June 2022, an article was published in the Atlantic titled "The Open Secret of Google Search". The article explained that many users were appending "Reddit" to their Google searches in order to find direct information from others. This was because they were finding that the Google results were unhelpful. Google responded to this by giving Reddit a boost in the search results. However, this has led to a number of problems. First, Reddit is a place where anonymous individuals post comments to questions in order to gain upvotes. This means that the information on Reddit is not always accurate or reliable. Second, Reddit users sometimes spout nonsense for upvotes, to be funny, or just to be deceptive. This has led to a situation where Google is now serving up Reddit threads in the search results that contain recommendations for committing lewd acts, doing drugs, and other activities that Google is not a fan of. Google has a major Reddit problem. It needs to find a way to balance the need to provide accurate and reliable information with the need to give users what they want #googlealgorithm #googleupdates #seoexpert
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The temptation to create a community on platforms like LinkedIn, Facebook, or WhatsApp is real. The answer is you can create a community on those platforms, but at the cost of privacy and control. With Networked, you're in the driver's seat… ✨ Fully Customizable. Tailor your community exactly the way you want. 🚀 100% Control. No more competing with other content or platform branding. 🔒 Privacy Assurance. Your data, your rules. No compromises. 🚫 Algorithm Independence. Say goodbye to the uncertainty of algorithm changes. Ready to take charge? Dive into www.networked.co for a community that's truly yours!
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Greed may be good. But letting it make you stupid is not. CAT (Content for AI Training), the fool’s gold rush de jure, has speared Reddit in its greedy heart. https://lnkd.in/gZDq_hsC When your business lives in an ecosystem requiring massive volunteer participation it is best to consider where your value originates that keeps your organization alive, thriving, and ultimately adapting. Reddit’s value does not arise from reselling user/customer created content. Regardless of what the most evil lawyers of our time say (IP lawyers), that attitude will kill the golden goose, not exploit it. Reddit’s value does originate from being the infrastructure where massive volunteer and user communities socialize. Reddit’s value is not derived from obtuse user agreements written with such careless self-interest that Reddit may abuse critical elements of its own ecosystem with impunity. Reddit cannot resell or lay privileged monetized claim on user provided content. It cannot afford to abuse critically supporting open source and voluntary elements of its environment. UA be damned, because that is the surest way to stop Reddit from thriving and surviving. Being anti-social when your core business rests on being the place to socialize is outright suicide. Facebook which plays fast and loose with its users could not do this either. For good reason Facebook intentionally protects its primary value of reselling intimate private details to third party message manipulators from being in the lime light. Whatever you do, never, ever poison your primary value delivered that keeps you in the game. Guess they needed a better Enterprise Business Architecture team which understands the primacy of self-sustaining value generation above all else. Someday soon this will be a classic business study, except in MBA schools where they mock the very notion of value because it does not have units measured in currency. MBA thinking of value limited to fungible value in the form of currency has killed many an enterprise while they deny that the much more important notion of existentential value even exits.
Reddit mods fear spam overload as BotDefense leaves “antagonistic” Reddit
arstechnica.com
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A number (read: THOUSANDS) of Reddit communities - known as subreddits, have committed to a blackout that will impact 10’s of millions of users and see entire subreddits shut down for 48 hours. Why? On May 31, 2023 Reddit had announced they were raising their prices for API calls from being free to amounts which will cripple third-party apps such as Apollo, Reddit Is Fun, BaconReader, etc. So Reddit communities are acting out. Today (June 12) will see thousands of subreddits go dark, while others will go away permanently unless the issue is not addressed by Reddit. We are interested to see how this will go, and if this will spur any action or response from Reddit. Stay tuned! #Reddit #DigitalMarketing #DigitalmarketingConsultancy #Melbourne
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What is going on over at Reddit, Inc.? 🤔 It's like the 'front page to the internet' has apparently learned nothing from the relatively recent D&D OGL debacle! 😮 For those that don't know: Reddit has been severely impacted this past week, with 7.2k of the 7.8k subreddits being set to [Private], meaning they are no longer accessible by millions of non-members (eg the VAST majority of those browsing the site). This has been done in protest at Reddit's recently revealed plans to charge significant amounts (in some cases literally millions of dollars) for access to their API's - a rate quoted as being nearly one hundred times more than charged by other companies for similar API access (eg Imgur) As you can imagine, for a site created, run and moderated almost entirely by the users, this has been less than well received #WhoKnew I understand the desire to be a "self-sustaining business", and the challenges involved with managing content around the recent AI 'uprising', but come on! Predatory and exploitative pricing is only going to alienate the community, and piss off everyone who made the site what it is today - and good luck sustaining anything at all if all the users and developers (and moderators!) have had enough, and simply moved elsewhere! 😰 https://lnkd.in/gM37kK6D
Reddit just went ‘dark’, and the site is in chaos
independent.co.uk
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Reddit was hit with a major outage on the very first day of a massive sitewide protest against its proposed API changes. Thousands of subreddits went dark as users voiced their opposition to the new API pricing terms, and the resulting blackout caused widespread disruptions to the website. #reddit #website #APIs #change #pricingterms #PriceIncrease #blackout #rebel #protest #subreddits #BreakingNews #trendingnow #NewsUpdate #dailynews #TheDeepDiveCa #SmallCapSteve #smallcaps #smallcap
Reddark: Reddit Suffers Outage As Subreddits Protest
https://thedeepdive.ca
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Hundreds of subreddits plan to go dark indefinitely after Reddit CEO’s internal memo More than 300 subreddits, including popular ones like r/aww, r/music r/videos, and r/futurology, plan to go dark indefinitely after a large protest against Reddit’s API changes ends on June 14. This means users won’t be able to access these communities during this blackout. This step was announced after The Verge reported that in an internal memo, Reddit CEO Steve Huffman said “Like all blowups on Reddit, this one will pass as well”. Huffman said in the memo that the blackout hasn’t caused any significant impact on the company’s revenue. Over the last few days, (June 12-14) thousands of subreddits have gone dark to protest API changes by the platform that will potentially shut down many third-party apps. Because of these subreddits going dark, the site briefly faced an outage on June 12. A post on Twitter suggested that this blackout impacted a large portion of Reddit’s activity. However, as Huffman suggested in the memo, a lot of the subreddits will be active again on Wednesday. Developers have also spun up a tracker site that tells users what subreddits are dark, restricted, or public. Reddit mods are planning a blackout tomorrow. W...
Hundreds of subreddits plan to go dark indefinitely after Reddit CEO’s internal memo
https://1worldsolutions.com/blog
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