| > Who do you think the existing mods are? I am. I moderate my local city subreddit. All I do is remove surveys and point people seeking housing to the megathread. (We're a university town, so lots of students seek people willing to fill in badly designed questionaires.) Yes, the biggest subreddits will always have a number of power tripping mods. But the vast majority of subreddits have a stable mod team putting in a little daily effort to keep their online community organised. These are the people who will walk away if the removal of their preferred tools makes moderating harder. At least I know I will. |
No matter how you try to fashion your logic, Reddit was a community effort, done in good faith by many volunteers, and it really was the last of the platforms with any sort of legitimacy because of that, and that is now gone for good.
Do people learn the lesson about trusting capital? We'll see.