Like a lot of fighty stuff on the campus Yak, it was downvoted and removed (once a post gets -5 karma it gets taken down). Then OP then made pains to talk about how they were a woman in the tech industry, and had suffered persecution in Ukraine for not being ethnically Russian, and a bunch of other stuff in defense of supporting "free speech" that seemed tailor made for an astro-turf campaign. One of them was crying about how Reddit is going against its commitment to "free speech". This morning there were a few threads about this. I'm on Yik Yak (anonymous location-based twitter with upvotes, essentially - it parrots a lot of Reddit conventions and culture, I've found) because I find it's a good way to keep up with what's going on with the undergrads on campus. Posted by lonefrontranger at 1:26 PM on J That said this has been long in coming and I am glad to see it happen. I never venture into /r/all because, just, no. I find the threaded discussions easier to follow for an old forum user like myself.
#MASS TAGGER REDDIT FULL#
I stick to subs about my particular nerdy interests because there is a sub for everything and my particular subs of interest are very well modded by thoughtful people and are full of engaging content. My husband is a redditor and turned me to the dark side some years back. I do not know what the specific reasons were behind FPH being banned, or how well they fall into the standards the admins are purporting to uphold. I have no idea where internal harassment falls on Reddits priority list.
External sucks and Reddit is moving hard to smack that shit down. So Internal sucks, but not enough to make any big movements right now. If the room actively encourages or supports the people trying to chuck shit and dry hump things outside the box, the admins move in to clean house. Once someone tries to escape the box to try to chuck shit and dry hump something outside of the box, it gets into no-no territory. And while Reddit doesn't like that, its all happening inside the big box. There might be some rooms where the people there only ever want to run around chucking shit everywhere and attempting to fornicate with inanimate objects. Imagine reddit like a big box full of little rooms, and you can go in and out of the rooms. In reference to questions about KIA, SRS, subs 'known' for brigading (even SRD has that reputation), I'm thinking Reddit doesn't care enough. Kind of wish they would take the time to release some statistics on that.
But only the admins would be able to release that kind of info. you aren't getting downvoted by a brigade, you're getting downvoted for being shitty). One big possibility is that claims of brigading are somewhat exaggerated (e.g. If I had to guess, Reddit is more forgiving of brigading because it only affects reddit, while external harassment affects people in Real Lifetm. I'm not sure where brigading falls on this spectrum. Once it becomes actions taken against internal/external groups specifically to harass/demean/threaten, its an issue. You can have plenty of shitty ideas and talk about them with other people who have shitty ideas. TL DR Say what you want, but keep it to your subreddit.īeing racist on your sub thats about being racist? Ideas, whateverīeing racist on your sub and then harassing users on other subs, facebook, instagram, etc., is bad behavior. As of release, it's been lightly tested, but early adopters will effectively be beta testers, so please hit me up with any issues you encounter or suggestions you may have.This is a decent summary from /u/lumpy_potato on the /r/subredditdrama thread: Now, simply click on the tag, and you'll be taken straight to a list of every single post they're tagged for. The old tagger linked to the post that first got the user tagged. Hell yeah, you can tag every single subreddit with a custom color of your choosing. Want to build a custom filter just for truly nazi subs? You can do it! Would you rather know if someone is a r/The_Donald user than a r/TumblrInAction user? Totally possible! The new tagger allows you to sort and exclude subreddits as you wish. Lower it a bit, and you'll get everyone who posts there. Raise the bar, and you'll only get people who are absolutely active users. Probably the most requested feature, this filter allows you to set a minimum number of posts to be considered a "user" of the sub.
Performance impact is minimal from my testing, and data usage, if that's an issue, is a couple of KB a page.
Users are automatically retrieved every time you load a page. Available on firefox and chrome, the plugin is a one-time install.