Anyone else read this? The arrogance is palpable.

  • SirGolan@lemmy.sdf.org
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    1 year ago

    It’s just so tone deaf. And he’s totally lying about users not supporting the blackout. All the subreddits I was on where the mods asked people what they wanted to do, most of the comments were in favor of keeping them dark indefinitely. The rest were agreeing to the blackout in general. I don’t remember seeing a single person objecting.

    • borkcorkedforks@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      Casual users probably just want shit to work and didn’t know about the black out until it was happening. They won’t notice why they should care until their app of choice goes offline or communities start falling apart due to modding issues. The issues coming from mods being pushed out, leaving, or having fewer tools.

    • jclinares@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      I don’t remember seeing a single person objecting.

      Depends on where you look, I suppose.

      We did a poll in r/snowboarding (a subreddit that it’s in its off-season, and currently just frequented by our most “loyal” users) about whether to continue the blackout, and after two days of voting, it was literally a 50-50 split, and the majority of the comments were against the blackout. On the week before the blackout, the vast majority of support was there for the 48 hour blackout. If we’d done that same poll in February, I have a feeling that the majority would have voted to not continue the blackout. In that sense, I don’t think spaz is too far off the mark.

      What the lying piece of corporate crap is ignoring is the fact that alternatives have grown considerably, traffic has gone down, and entire mod teams are quitting in protest. Reddit is going to be around for many many years, but this is the first time that I see a true push to create something different, not just for a few undesirables (i.e. Voat), but for the larger community in general.