u/Awkwardtheturtle posting an update on her reddit ban
teddit.adminforge.de
u/Awkwardtheturtle somehow posting an update on her reddit ban ... on reddit itself if i'm reading the pic correctly. Not sure how that's possible, maybe someone saw an edited post from her?
You are viewing a single comment
Wasn't /u/AwkwardTheTurtle kind of exploitative herself?
So the lore goes. I never interacted with this - or any power mod on reddit - so I can't speak from personal experience.
The point I'm getting at though - reddit wants cooperative mods who would have gone along with the new rules.
This powermod was likely one of those folks, who didn't support the protests or blackouts, and seems to have just got taken out in the crossfire.
Furthermore it's revealed that this powermod claims to have had a connection to reddit admins.
So basically if this person's connections couldn't save their account, especially this kind of mod that reddit would likely have wanted to keep, it shows how powerless even reddit admins are over corporate. (A lot of us here might have already known this, but even so.)
reddit is really shooting themselves in the foot here, blindly kicking out not only protesters but folks who might have gone on to be great loyalists.
A lot of American mods do; there were a few years there with top admin and community teams did a 'roadshow' type thing where they'd schedule meetups and connect with mods in person. Having met admin in person isn't really that wild an indication of favour, so much as having showed up to an event somewhere.
Sounds reasonable. So mostly it's just a sign of reddit not giving a darn to those that they used to reach out to. Another sign of how downhill things have gone.
It's a very classic Reddit Inc thing - they know that they have a poor relationship with their mods, they know that they need to address that ... so they do something fun and quirky and showy - but then fail to make any sort of concrete follow-up on or take actions supporting the connections they've made.
They've got this big profitability issue right? Wouldn't it be better - more affordable - to take those concrete follow-up actions instead of repeatingly spending money on showy, quirky, fun things over and over again?
Yup. Sure would have been!
I think that they were allocated to separate teams, mind; part of what seems to have gone quietly wrong over there is that there's too many teams that are too silo'd and aren't connecting correctly. Community team does community stuff, but they have no idea what AEO or development are doing, etc.
At least we've heard from Community a few times that they have a really hard time getting answers out of AEO when something goes wrong, and separately heard that development doesn't always give much heads-up to other teams on incoming new features - both of which seem like the worst cases for a failure in communications, which generally indicates the less critical stuff is even worse.