this post was submitted on 25 Jun 2023
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A lot of mods are community founders. They care about their community, not reddit. Reddits just a middleman getting in the way.
Imagine a group of friends. Reddit is the friend with the best house for parties, but is kinda a dick. The mods are the social ones that brought this friend group together in the first place. Reddit is being stupid and making dumb rules that mostly hurt the mod. The mod is trying to either get reddit to relax the rules OR convince the rest of the friends to leave. Truthfully the friends should leave, but reddits house is so nice and they're comfortable. The mod could leave, but they're afraid all that will result in is losing their entire friend group. The whole situation sucks all around.
Thanks, that's a more precise analogy. Definitely we were never metaphorically 'friends'with reddit - the best times on the site have been when I didn't really know who was running it or care and they just stayed out of everyone's way.
I can see why mods of any size would want to preserve their existing community, because it's true that most people won't migrate together. With reddit's attitude it seems hopeless at this point to me, though. Perhaps if they had a change of leadership, but it seems likely to only get worse if they IPO and are further corporatized.
Nosleep for instance...I can see them being in a tight spot...it's such a niche community and honestly a fairly important one...I at least have 4 physical books I've purchased from authors. It's such a great launch pad. I feel bad that I'll really not be spending hours there at all anymore
There is a Lemmy equivalent. Sorry not sure of the name. It was there when I was scanning through subscriptions.
Shameless self-promotion: It's https://lemmy.world/c/lemmyscareyou or [email protected], would love if more people can contribute over there.