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by intended
1976 days ago
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I addressed what happened to the downvote button elsewhere: --------- I recently went through some old logs and discussions from 7/8 years ago. People actually talked about how important it was to upvote content and follow rediquette. That discussion died because you have to enforce rediquette and the "honor code" fails when people see that abusing the code goes unpunished. This means that upvote downvote become like/dislike. To me this implies that if you want to make upvotes work, then you need to select your community for rule compliance. |
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I think of it a bit differently.
Reddit could have its 10 commandments and adhere to that. That would be clear and transparent and it should apply both to mods and users alike. There should be no cider house rules. A community is given power by its userbase. Mods should respect their userbase more than they do.
Mods can simply not be trusted to be good faith actors. They constantly abuse their power and Reddit enables it. They are encouraged by the (cult)ture there.
Every mod is free to act as they wish and Reddit will support it. They act like bullies is more like it. Do as I say not as I do.
I then take a step back and wonder. Are crowds truly wise? Or are we simply watching groupthink play out at massive scale?
The crowd is not a crowd anymore. It is a herd.