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by Bystander22
1072 days ago
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I'm not sure they were hiding anything; maybe you just missed it among the thousands of other posts collectively across thousands of subs about the blackout protest. There was also: * June 11: 'r/Python Will Black Out on June 12 at 00:00 UTC' * June 12: 'By community vote, r/Python will Return to a Blackout' * June 16: 'An Update about our Community' (text started with links, 'Here is a summary of the changes which prompted the recent Blackout. Here's our announcement for doing the Blackout....' and then 'Hence we wish to take another poll of community feedback...' * June 28: 'By community vote, r/Python will Return to a Blackout' Looks like the volunteer r/python mods were doing their best to keep everyone involved in the decision-making and informed of the outcomes while also juggling that volunteer activity for a for-profit company with their paying jobs and real-world responsibilities. |
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i'm confused about your post, is this 4 topics? was this all one long title? what was this except exactly as what i described it as?
and that's my point, it wasn't as transparent as it should have been
and if they want a blackout, so be it, but propose another place for people to aggregate. why destroy a community over this pettiness that's all but gone away since it happened? why does the same end result that happened in CrossValidated need to happen there too? what good does this do in the world?
its all passive aggressiveness when communication can literally solve everyones problem, especially when this was the issue with the reddit admins to begin with! why are they acting like the reddit admins by refusing to communicate properly? its all so ridiculous