amiugly 内の [deleted] によるリンク 17/M Pretty confident no girl has ever found me attractive, this is me going to my prom alone.

[–]kn0thing 99ポイント100ポイント  (0子コメント)

There's some good advice here, but one other thing I want to mention is that your life really begins after you graduate from high school. The stuff that has been your world up until this point pretty much disappears once you get your diploma. It gets better.

There's a great r/askreddit post with lots of advice for 18 yr olds from last week, actually.

You seem like a nice dude. The confidence will come and so will the girls, but for what it's worth, from one human to another, I don't think you're ugly.

BTW, your younger-looking face will be a huge asset when you're older, too. u/spez is like 32 going on 22.

Upvoted 内の cat_sweaterz によるリンク Ten years of reddit [Video]

[–]kn0thing[A] -79ポイント-78ポイント  (0子コメント)

OK, so I'm obviously really late for this - sorry.

They are being applied to people who do not appear to be spammers. And whether they know it or not is irrelevant, because both the ban and people's reactions to it happened in the same thread.

I agree. We've gotta fix it. Right now there's just one hammer and we need better ways to curb and educate about bad behavior and shadowbanning fails there. I know the team is working on a version of this.

From what it looks like, it's been deployed in a number of cases against people who did nothing but smacktalk either the admins, or the interim CEO. Neither of these things are against reddit's rules, and they certainly don't deserve the spammer treatment.

That's certainly not something I want to see happen. I can't say for sure if it is, but I'll make sure the community team knows that people are not to be punished with shadowbans for that. Granted, there's most likely some instances of people being hit with it for evading other bans, which is breaking a reddit rule. edit: confirmed w u/5days: "This is absolutely not what happens.

Now, that may or may not be the case, but the radio silence when anyone is asked about this matter (either by modmail to /r/reddit.com or similar) naturally leads people to assume that something not entirely above board is going on.

I understand that.

FWIW, I actually do think something untoward is going on, and I think it's something along the lines of sanitization for possible upcoming suitors.

Definitely not that.

Recent behavior on the site matches up a bit too closely with what a corporation would "like", yknow what I mean?

I can assure you it's not that.

If that's the case, just come out and say it already. If that's NOT the case, then it really, really shouldn't require this level of outrage to get an honest answer.

You're right. It's been bad. We've gotta do better. I hope this is helping.

You know what would be really cool and go a very long way to placating people? A group admin IamA. With people like you, /u/krispykrackers, /u/ekjp, and the lot. Perhaps even make it a regular thing?

Yes. Obviously, this has come up after this weekend, too.

Which communities? I'm referring to /r/news - the rule says "no politics", okay fine, but for some reason, the TPP is considered politics, while supreme court decisions and things like SOPA are not? We've come from the entire site rallying against SOPA to a law which has the potential to cause more damage being actively flattened from one of the most visible places on the site? Here's the all time top submissions on that subreddit. A good chunk of them are blatantly political.

I'd like to give communities the chance to dictate their own rules. The bigger issue here imho is that they're a default, so their decision has more weight. If we built a better system, if enough people thought one sub was moderating too poorly, they could just go to another sub fluidly, but defaults + poor subreddit discovery breaks that. We need to fix those things and if we do I think we'll go a long way toward solving that problem you describe.

I'd feel a lot better if default subreddits had to hew to higher standards than /r/joes_news_shack, yknow? I get that the idea is or was that subreddits are their own communities, but a hell of a lot of power comes with being a default (not the least of which: they're the face of the site!), and you know what they say about power.

Yep, gotta figure out a better solution than defaults which are a hangover from when we didn't have enough active communities to just tell people "hey what are you into? subscribe to these places..." which we can do now.

+1 to that idea of getting rid of the concept anyways. It's kind of telling that the consensus on the internet appears to be reddit gets better when you unsubscribe from them.

Yep!

This, what you did right here? Do more of it, in highly visible places. People think something bad is happening because the staff is generally ignoring their questions - so what just happened here? Make that happen more.

Yeah, I needed to have re-read this over this weekend. I've been on pretty much nonstop since Thursday talking to users, but the vast majority of comments have been in mod-only communities, or slack, or email, or PM, and the few publicly visible comments I made were stupid.

Are places like /r/kotakuinaction on the verge of being banned or not? How can they avoid that fate?

I don't believe so. If they're not breaking the harassment policy, then they shouldn't be.

Speaking of /r/kotakuinaction, why are they disallowed from organizing email campaigns to corporations? (Famously, being told that posting a PR person's company contact info at Volkswagen is not allowed) - and what rule of reddit does this violate?

We definitely need to re-think this rule. Adding to the list. Organizing an email campaign to target a PR person's public corporate email seems like it should be reasonable. There are a few of rules we need to clarify.

What is the actual definition of "brigading", and how does it differ from regular comment/post interaction on the site?

Whatever it is right now it's too vague + complex. There was a good thread about this over the weekend -- here's my thoughts from a comment that should help:

"np is not the answer. It's a terrible new user experience, too -- most folks have no idea (nor should they) how it works and that's a problem. New system should make np unnecessary. It should be a that gives mods control over this. If you as a mod don't want your community to be affected by bestof post, then we should make that easy enough to enforce with a few clicks. And I'd like a definition of brigading that comes out of it that's very transparent and concise with the definition (and again give as much authority and tools to mods to enforce as possible)."

What measures are in place to assure that fake/abusive reports do not lead to removal of people or communities?

The community team can break this down better than me, but it really comes down to the rule: "Systematic and/or continued actions to torment or demean someone in a way that would make a reasonable person (1) conclude that reddit is not a safe platform to express their ideas or participate in the conversation, or (2) fear for their safety or the safety of those around them."

Blackout2015 内の vertical-align-botom によるリンク Leaked conversation from kn0thing and the /r/science mods

[–]kn0thing -108ポイント-107ポイント  (0子コメント)

That was a very shorthand way of saying "There is an email somewhere in someone else's inbox that has this private information and I'll introduce you as soon as I can get it." And yes, I agree, I sucked at communicating that.

An r/science mod actually came into this thread and verified that we've been helping.

ideasfortheadmins 内の raldi によるリンク Create the position of "Reddit Public Advocate"

[–]kn0thing -178ポイント-177ポイント  (0子コメント)

We've screwed up, but none of these were dictated by money.

Monday is the start of a new week and I wanted to be sure everyone will be online (not on US holiday weekend) for a post.

ideasfortheadmins 内の raldi によるリンク Create the position of "Reddit Public Advocate"

[–]kn0thing -107ポイント-106ポイント  (0子コメント)

Not if it's an obvious troll, but if we said "hey, what mod tool is most important and everyone said XYZ, we'd work on XYZ"

Blackout2015 内の vertical-align-botom によるリンク Leaked conversation from kn0thing and the /r/science mods

[–]kn0thing -92ポイント-91ポイント  (0子コメント)

Aiming for Monday because doing it on a holiday weekend is avoiding peak traffic.

Blackout2015 内の vertical-align-botom によるリンク Leaked conversation from kn0thing and the /r/science mods

[–]kn0thing[A] -125ポイント-124ポイント  (0子コメント)

I appreciate the mod who posted the context for this. I wasn't trying to powergrab the AMA, I was trying to track down the contact information because at that moment all I knew was Victoria had managed it privately. As soon as I got it (as we have been with all of the AMAs) we've been introducing those people to their respective points of contact on r/books, r/music, r/iama etc.

We want mods to be autonomous -- the goal of the transition was to give them the power to manage their own AMAs (as I've said, tho not very well) we're just using the AMA@ email to handle + triage inbound (because famous people aren't all savvy enough to message the mods) AND to do outreach if a community has a big ask AMA that they themselves can't. That's it.

I've spent the past three days commenting almost non-stop with moderators and users trying to help + listen -- though I realize that my comment history (downvotes aside) looks pretty limited (and bad) if you can't see all the posts on moderator subs -- and I know this is going to get pummeled, but I figured I'd say it anyway.

ideasfortheadmins 内の raldi によるリンク Create the position of "Reddit Public Advocate"

[–]kn0thing[A] -130ポイント-129ポイント  (0子コメント)

This is super interesting indeed, raldi ;) Hi.

I've read that post from karmanaut a few times over the last couple days and stolen quite a few ideas from here.

Along these lines, I'd love to get your ideas on this idea I had after talking to mods all weekend long:

I think of the subs defaultmods, modtalk, and modclub as three parts of a 'legislature' (like house + senate in USA) -- this is a new metaphor so bear with me -- and I'd love to have a monthly "state of the communities" where we basically say "hey, here's what we're working on -- and what do you think we should be thinking about?" and it starts a conversation that guides how we're thinking for the month. The signal to noise ratio will probably be best on a smaller one like defaultmods, but it's just as important to get the insights of mods of communities with 10 subscribers in modclub. Then we can synthesize all 3 and produce a quick report for everyone internally at reddit (and put it up on a dedicated sub, too).

Feedback please!

pics 内の kcell によるリンク Reddit seems to have forgotten the most basic rule here

[–]kn0thing -869ポイント-868ポイント  (0子コメント)

Thank you. They're entitled to their downvotes.

pics 内の kcell によるリンク Reddit seems to have forgotten the most basic rule here

[–]kn0thing -1443ポイント-1442ポイント  (0子コメント)

I was stupid. I'm sorry for that. Believe me, I know I owe everything to millions of random strangers on the internet and a few key people along the way who believed in me and took a chance on me.

We've got a lot of work to do and we can't fix it overnight, but we know we have to fix it longterm.

pics 内の BengaliBoy によるリンク Put a face to the name. This is Victoria, former Reddit employee.

[–]kn0thing[A] -1614ポイント-1613ポイント  (0子コメント)

I'm sorry. That was a stupid comment.

We've let this go to far and we can't fix it overnight, but we are going to fix it for the long-term.

modclub 内の solidwhetstone によるリンク /r/modclub AMAgeddon discussion thread

[–]kn0thing -1356ポイント-1355ポイント  (0子コメント)

To be clear, I made two dumb joke comments in SRD, which I admit were dumb, but I spent the rest of my day earnestly messaging users answering questions and helping best I could.

modclub 内の solidwhetstone によるリンク /r/modclub AMAgeddon discussion thread

[–]kn0thing -1178ポイント-1177ポイント  (0子コメント)

I apologize, I didn't know about this until someone in one of those threads suggested it would be a great home for the regular Q&As with team reddit about mod tools and improvements we're working on.

Is that something you all would be interested in?

modclub 内の solidwhetstone によるリンク /r/modclub AMAgeddon discussion thread

[–]kn0thing -1335ポイント-1334ポイント  (0子コメント)

I submitted the same exact post, seconds apart, to r/defaultmods and r/modtalk -- I thought I was covering all my bases, but I obviously didn't. I apologize. Here's my post.

First, I’m sorry for how we handled communicating change to the AMA team this morning. I take responsibility for that. We should have made a post to r/DefaultMods announcing the transition and contacted the affected mods teams right after it happened and clearly articulated how there would not be a disruption with scheduled AMAs and those communications would now happen via AMA@reddit.com as we find a full-time replacement.

That said, I would like to accomplish two things immediately:

Get the blacked out subreddits back online

Your message was received loud and clear. The communication between Reddit and the moderators needs to improve dramatically. We will work closely with you all going forward to ensure events like today don’t happen again. At this point, however, the blackout has served its purpose, and now it’s time to get Reddit functioning again. I know many of you are still upset. We will continue to work through these issues with you all, but redditors don’t deserve to be punished any further over an issue that is ultimately between Reddit and the moderators.

Work out a plan for going forward

In the short-term, we will use this forum to discuss how we will improve being a moderator on reddit. I’ll personally be in here asking and listening. There are a couple of changes we can make immediately to improve our relationship:

  • u/krispykrackers, a well-trusted employee and community member, is now going to be point person for moderator issues. This should help alleviate the immediate pain, and we’ll continue to evaluate how it's working going forward.

  • We will continue to dedicate resources to AMAs specifically to help manage the workload. Moderating AMAs are a uniquely heavy burden because it requires a lot of coordination between the external guests and the moderators, and Reddit will always be involved. Our process won’t be perfect overnight, but we will refine it over time with the moderators (especially r/IAMA, r/science, r/books the most prolific communities for AMAs).

Longer term, we are building tools to help you all do your jobs more effectively (anti-brigading and better modmail/tools are already in progress). We will build these with your input and incorporate more transparency. We have many ideas, and we would like to hear yours. We will keep you all in the loop as our plans crystallize into actual tools.

news 内の Sanity_in_Moderation によるリンク The admins have responded to the blackout.

[–]kn0thing -1081ポイント-1080ポイント  (0子コメント)

Yes, I admittedly made a dumb joke comment in that SRD thread, but I spent the entirety of my day earnestly responding to, listening to and helping as many redditors as I could.

OutOfTheLoop 内の chickenmagic によるリンク Why has R/Iama been set to private?

[–]kn0thing -953ポイント-952ポイント  (0子コメント)

You're right. There's a lot of really reasonable features in here that we should absolutely incorporate into reddit mod tools.