I've had it with reddit

bitchkat@lemmy.world to Reddit@lemmy.world – 152 points –

I think I finally reached my breaking point with reddit (about time). Earlier this month the humorless admins of /r/teslamotors banned me for posting a video of my custom charge port cover. A day or so later I mistakenly posted on the sub using my secondary account. That's on me. The /r/teslamotors admins gave me a permaban and reddit gave me 7 day site ban. I can take my lumps so whatever.

However, apparently I commented today on /r/teslamotors using the account that received the permaban. Dumbass reddit gave me another 7 day site ban for ban evasion. WTF? Either a software bug allowed me to comment or /r/teslamotors lifted my ban for some reason.

Neither of those constitute ban evasion IMHO. I'm also tired of using old.reddit.com in phone browser since they killed apis.

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Well, I think federation is the way, it doesn't seem perfect (I've had a couple of issues with lemmy) but this feels like a step in the right direction. Reddit has definitely tainted the link aggregator site, and concepts like shadow bans and vote fuzzing are just really terrible. I am new to Lemmy but I don't feel like I am using something inhuman, it's back to feeling soulful, whereas when using Reddit I can't get it out of my mind that it's this evil monolithic machine.

Any system capable of growth will never be perfect. But it will be more resilient than a monolith.

I think federated systems (and more broadly, open models in general) will be more successful in the long run.

Its the same feel of reddit 5-10 years ago. Actually remembering local random users without them being news worthy is wild.