Steve Huffman said he has planned to change the site’s rules so that users had the power to vote out moderators, following a 48-hour protest blackout.
Steve Huffman said he has planned to change the site’s rules so that users had the power to vote out moderators, following a 48-hour protest blackout.
So basically, we can now vote out the mods and post what we want on subreddits? And if the new mods don’t like what we post, we vote them out too? That sounds like a disaster waiting to happen.
Site Admin have opposed “vote out” mechanics since debuting subreddits, entirely in the understanding that as bad as the current system is - reducing it to rank populism would be worse and far easier for malicious actors to exploit. I vague recall Spez being vocal about that issue, years ago - how convenient he forgets all those opinions once it doesn’t serve Reddit’s interests to just ignore flaws in their mod system.
The best irony in all this is that he’s determined that even minority dissent to participation in the protests warrants sweeping changes to facilitate - citing the importance of accommodating those perspectives - but massive dissent against reddit changes is a perspective he’ll do anything to avoid even acknowledging, much less accommodating. Dissent really matters when he agrees with it, and we have a laundry list of excuses for why dissent he doesn’t like simply doesn’t count.
Is there a subreddit you don’t like? Are you a mod of a larger subreddit? Get your users to vote out the smaller subreddit’s mods and vote you in, then delete it.
This issue could be prevented, perhaps to have a voting ability you need to have a certain amount of karma, comments, posts, history, etc or a combination of the above attributes, then once a vote is called there’s a secondary voting round where only a few randomly selected users get to vote. That would water down any flooding attempts.
r/politics is about to become the first internet civil war.
Election of 1860 v2 Electric Boogaloo - World Wide Edition