上位 200 件のコメント表示する 500

[–]post_break 2686ポイント2687ポイント  (137子コメント)

Is this the type of communication we can expect from miss krispy?

[–]Zaelot 656ポイント657ポイント  (54子コメント)

Wow, and that's the co-founder. o_o

[–]Saiing 862ポイント863ポイント  (51子コメント)

Alexis Ohanion has become exactly the thing he probably thought he'd never be when he built this site: completely out of touch with the community that frequents it. He's been too busy making media appearances as "reddit co-founder" in the last couple of years and being treated like a celebrity and now it's gone to his head. He doesn't need to care about the little people any more. He's part of the 0.1%*, and sadly not the nice part that still remembers where they came from.

He no longer sounds like a normal person. He talks in dismissive phrases and PR soundbites. Fuck that guy.

[Edit: Some responses think he probably isn't in the 0.1% - They may be right, but he sold reddit to a major publisher, was a founder of HipMunk, is a partner in Y Combinator - I think it's reasonable to assume he has at least some net worth on paper. Added to which, there's nothing wrong with being successful - it's how you act when you achieve it that matters.]

[–]chasm_city 156ポイント157ポイント  (13子コメント)

I saw him speak about a year ago. He was obnoxious and said "amazeballs" a lot.

[–]snarklefruit 82ポイント83ポイント  (5子コメント)

That's exactly how I imagine him based on all of the immature shit he's pulled. Just an obnoxious 14-year-old.

[–]Tischlampe 62ポイント63ポイント  (6子コメント)

It is like Gus Fring said. One has to learn being wealthy (in this case famous).

[–]Oedipus_Flex 108ポイント109ポイント  (1子コメント)

From the comments of his I've seen he seems like 10x more of a douche than Chairman Pao

[–]47REO 274ポイント275ポイント  (8子コメント)

The best part was when /u/kn0thing suggested "some of these these scientists are quite comfortable typing" in reference to a Stephen Hawking AMA!!!

[–]Three_Finger_Brown 43ポイント44ポイント  (0子コメント)

Hahaha, good point! I didnt even notice that when I read it, but I did think about the fact that the average person might be able to type well enough, but successfully navigating and posting on Reddit can be a bit intimidating at first, I wouldn't expect someone not familiar with the site to be able to efficiently conduct their own AMA

[–]DoctorLeviathan 28ポイント29ポイント  (2子コメント)

"Kn0thing"
What a fitting name, he managed to reply 11 times without saying a thing.

[–]borisvonboris 143ポイント144ポイント  (3子コメント)

What an utter clusterfuck.

[–]anothergaijin 35ポイント36ポイント  (2子コメント)

I love the "we're going to be working hard to hard to get this right" - they fail to realise that what we had before is exactly what people want now.

[–]Jarloftheyear 26ポイント27ポイント  (3子コメント)

So, after Victoria was fired, I played devils advocate for a while because there is always 2 sides to the story and we never heard Reddit's side. (Looking at it now, it is fucked up that Reddit didn't immediately put up an announcement briefly explaining why).

I had also been hearing that this protest on Reddit by many moderators and users wasn't that much about Victoria, but more about the disrespect, utter lack of communication, and ungrateful attitude towards Mods and users. I was very skeptical of this until I saw this conversation. I can tell you in plain seriousness, I will be looking for a Reddit alternative now. Fuck that man.

Let me also say you handled that like a champ, and you are my hero.

Edit: Grammer.

Edit 2: Grammar.

[–]Turkish_Bread 13ポイント14ポイント  (4子コメント)

Unbelievably bad form. I just recently joined reddit. Should I just leave now? Lol That correspondence is horrid. What a turn off. That Alexis guy sounds beyond help. And firing an admin everyone seems to respect and love is completely confusing to me. What have I walked into!!!???

[–]Conan3121 2874ポイント2875ポイント x2 (121子コメント)

Days after damage control interviews in mainstream media that stockholders and investment advisors read, the CEO of a beleaguered internet based company issues an official statement.

Boilerplate text bland statement, written by HR and vetted for plausible deniability by Legal.

Waits a day or two to post so the furore settles and the announcement has some clear air to reach investors.

Blames the episode on the Three Pillars Of Corporate Apology (hereafter TTPOCA) : 1. mistakes by the prior administrations 2. poor communication methods that we will now fix using trusted company insiders, and 3. slower than we hoped for IT development.

Added 2 bits of seasoning to the recipe with a folksy "we screwed up", and a followup hit back at personal attacks by a vocal minority of users.

As part of the product, I recognise a clear case of Big Company Behaving Badly Syndrome (BCBBS, abbreviation BS, variant type: quick profit and exit strategy).

[–]FloatingMoat 648ポイント649ポイント  (51子コメント)

Its sad that I now recognize corporate apologies so easily now. They are basically just a drag and drop template of "We messed up", "We're listening", "We will do better".

[–]turbozed 194ポイント195ポイント  (12子コメント)

My favorite folksy apology was Obama's "we tortured some folks" comment. Still makes me think wtf

[–]GeneralMalaiseRB 22ポイント23ポイント  (0子コメント)

It was just a little good 'ol, down home, old fashioned, back country torture with a side of grits, dagnabbit!

[–]InsidiousToilet 1749ポイント1750ポイント  (104子コメント)

Look, I honestly don't give a damn where I read the news. Reddit is convenient because it's all gathered into one nexus of information, with each specific interest having it's own little mini-dimension that I can hang out in. If you folks continue to fuck up (as has been the trend over the years), and a better, more convenient, site shows up to replace you, I have no qualms about leaving.

Also, shitty decision with krispykrackers as "Moderator Advocate". You should probably look into the history of these people on the site, to determine their level of expertise in "advocating" for anything or anyone, let alone moderators.

[–]BassheadPanda 5294ポイント5295ポイント  (338子コメント)

How do you feel about this comment by /u/CaptainObviousMC.

The thing is... She's absolutely right, I 100% don't care at all about this situation, reddit, or the moderators. I'm a pretty apathetic content sponge.

That fact is deadly dangerous to reddit, because the moment the content creators jump ship, I'll follow them like the fair weather fan I am, because I don't care -- at all -- where I get my content, or about which corporation or moderators are involved. If reddit compromises its content stream by having moderators jump ship, I'm out too, not because I care, but because I don't.

So she's right -- most reddit users absolutely don't care a bit about this, or the site, or really anything. And that's why she can't afford to piss off the moderators, who are the people who do care.

What's hilarious is that the reddit administration seems unable to see that most people not caring is precisely what makes the moderators caring so dangerous: they're wielding my caring by proxy, because they hold the keys to content.

Edit: If you're going to gild this comment, just give it /u/CaptainObviousMC instead.

[–]hittingkidsisbad 1262ポイント1263ポイント  (31子コメント)

I think it goes hand-in-hand with this comment by /u/Wienenschlagen

She's right.

The vast majority of Reddit users don't give a damn.

The vast majority of Reddit users didn't even notice.

The vast majority of Reddit users rarely even hit the voting buttons.

Reddit is not the vast majority of Reddit users.

Reddit is the communities that attract those users, and those communities don't exist without the moderators, the dedicated users, and the content creators.

Of those people, damn near all of them give a damn, and they're very, very upset with how this whole affair was handled.

Saying the "vast majority of Reddit users are uninterested" is the equivalent to saying "the vast majority of the United States is uninterested in its infrastructure."

No duh.

They'd sure be pissed off if it stopped working, though, and firing Victoria without any warning threw a huge wrench into the works.

Ellen Pao is out-of-touch with the company that she runs, the service it provides, and the people who use it. In her ongoing quest to make it a safe, marketable environment, she is driving it into the ground.

[–]Santero 322ポイント323ポイント  (11子コメント)

I'm a very active redditor, as anyone who glances at my history can see. I tried setting up a sub based around an area that is basically my job, and have pretty much flopped at it, despite being on here daily. Moderating a sub and making it a valuable part of Reddit takes time and effort, and to then treat those guys badly...

I love Reddit, but I get the feeling that we may have passed a tipping point.

[–]Binky216 1837ポイント1838ポイント  (82子コメント)

This is SO damn true. This is the error Digg made. Yes, you have millions of users clicking on billions of links. Those links are provided/moderated by a very small minority of your user base. If you don't keep those users happy, then there will be nothing here for the "majority" to do.

Back in the day the talk was always about "The Digg Effect" that would bring down websites due to the flood of traffic a front page link would create. I bet the Digg folks wish that was still a thing. Without keeping the contributors / moderators happy, Reddit could be looking at the same problems.

EDIT: Yeah, I get that Slashdot was there before Digg. I used Digg as the example since by all accounts they imploded quite spectacularly. Slashdot still (at least in my opinion) exists in a tolerable state... And I get that Digg had more/different failings than the issues Reddit is going through. The similarities are that they didn't listen to their userbase and took them for granted when there were issues.

EDIT2: Grammarz

[–]ill_mango 203ポイント204ポイント  (18子コメント)

The Digg Effect? You mean the Slashdot Effect? You mean the Reddit Hug of Death? You mean the Voat Bloat?

...okay I made that last one up. But seriously, the problem with Digg was that they pretty much did away with user-submitted content. It wasn't impossible to submit stuff, it was just much, much harder.

In the place of user-submitted content, they had computer-sorted syndication feeds. The frontpage turned from semi-interesting niche content to "corporate" BS. You think clickbaity titles are bad on Reddit? Much worse on Digg after the redesign.

Reddit has done a pretty good job with keeping that niche content in our feeds, mainly due to the concept of subscribing to subreddits.

But I think Reddit puts a lot of trust into their ranking algorithm - they believe that user votes are the reason why we see interesting stuff on our frontpage. I don't agree - I think the hard work of subreddit moderators is what allows those interesting articles to float to the top.

[–]EzDi 20ポイント21ポイント  (2子コメント)

So far "voaterboated" is the most popular.

https://np.reddit.com/r/Android/comments/3c0d5m/boats_for_voat_an_android_app_for_voat_with_the/csrch8k

edits:
changed to np link
voat bloat is good though
Somethingawful forums and Fark are somewhere in there for sites that would kill others (don't remember the names though). The thing is digg, /. and fark survived side by side. I used to hit up those three plus reddit until I decided that digg was only good for shitposts and Fark didn't have enough shitposts (that's not how I thought about it back then, but in hindsight it was). Then it was only reddit and /. Eventually only reddit once I noticed I'd already read 70% of slashdot before going there. Then digg imploded and I've been unsubscribing ever since, waiting for some other thing.

Even if this thing blows over, it's made 3-4 other places viable that had no chance before hand. I'm not leaving, but I'll only be coming to reddit for things with under 20k subscribers that would be dead on any smaller site.

[–]Sunhammer 4981ポイント4982ポイント  (513子コメント)

Communication: u/krispykrackers [3] is trying out the new role of Moderator Advocate. She will be the contact for moderators with reddit and will help figure out the best way to talk more often. We’re also going to figure out the best way for more administrators, including myself, to talk more often with the whole community.

....So you all picked the admin most legendarily nasty to moderators and users for this

uuuuhh

[–]docollas 3959ポイント3960ポイント x2 (290子コメント)

/u/krispykrackers is a horrible choice and just goes to show how out of touch you still are /u/ekjp

Edit: Please do not gild me.

[–]BikebutnotBeast 1458ポイント1459ポイント  (243子コメント)

/u/krispykrackers[1] is a horrible choice

Any information on why you say that? Just being curious over here.

Edit: I'll take some gilding guiltless ploy for gold

[–]giantdeathrobots 616ポイント617ポイント  (128子コメント)

I'd like to know too, not very up to date.

[–]isiramteal 1602ポイント1603ポイント  (120子コメント)

I had an interaction regarding a shadowban. She was unprofessional and treated me like a child. Never went into depth after requesting her to.

I mod a sub where she's gone into the sub and removed a post without contacting the sub.

[–]just-another-troll 3255ポイント3256ポイント  (141子コメント)

Duh, the usual Reddit brand of business strategy, automatically negating literally everything Pao just said they were going to fix and instead make it worse by continuing to make poor decisions, ignoring public opinion, and a general disregard for decency.

Reddit: We fire loved community members and promote hated ones.

Also, shadowban incoming.

[–]isthatalrightbro 1985ポイント1986ポイント  (124子コメント)

I agree with you 100% man. Victoria did so much and the fact they didn't see that meant they have no idea what's going on.

The fact she's getting job offers immediately says a lot about her worth

[–]joshamania 917ポイント918ポイント  (30子コメント)

Something tells me /u/chooter's professional network is pretty fucking amazing.

[–]PlantingATree 805ポイント806ポイント  (25子コメント)

Not only was her name pretty high-profile on one of the biggest sites on the internet, she was in direct contact with hundreds of public figures. You know, the kind of people who regularly hire PR personnel. Shes going to do just fine.

[–]you_dont_know_me_21 288ポイント289ポイント  (3子コメント)

Yeah, she'll end up with a hefty (and well-deserved) increase over what she was making at Reddit, and be treated much better, to boot. Sometimes getting fired is the best thing that can happen for you. We'll all miss her, but she'll be just fine.

[–]lolthr0w 413ポイント414ポイント  (10子コメント)

And her termination made the New York Times, so they're going to know she's looking for a new job...

[–]strategic_butter 39ポイント40ポイント  (3子コメント)

At this rate she could probably do PR for a major late night talk show.

[–]walter-lego 570ポイント571ポイント  (17子コメント)

Her visibility is reason enough for job offers. She's a living SEO asset.

[–]devlspawn 110ポイント111ポイント  (12子コメント)

What kind of monster would go work for a company who's blog posts have words wrapping to the next line.

[–]SingularTier 4406ポイント4407ポイント  (2253子コメント)

Hey Ellen,

Although I disagree with the direction reddit HQ is taking with the website, I understand that monetizing a platform such as reddit can be a daunting task. To that effect, I have some questions that I hope you will take some time to address. These represent some of the more pressing issues for me as a user.

1) Can we have a clear, objective, and enforceable definition of harassment? For example, some subs have been told that publicizing PR contacts to organize boycotts and campaigns is harassment and will get the sub banned - while others continue to do so unabated. I know /u/kn0thing touched on this subject recently, but I would like you to elaborate.

2) Why was the person who was combative and hyper-critical of Rev. Jackson shadowbanned (/u/huhaskldasdpo)? I understand he was rude and disrespectful and I would have cared less if he was banned from /r/IAMA, but could you shed some light on the reasoning for the site-wide ban?

3) What are some of the plans that reddit HQ has for monetizing the web site? Will advertisements and sponsored content be labelled as such?

4) Could you share some of your beliefs and principles that you plan on using to guide the site's future?

I believe that communication is key to reddit (as we know it) surviving its transition in to a profitable website. While I am distraught over how long it took for a site-wide announcement to come out (forcing many users to get statements from NYT/Buzzfeed/etc.), I can relate not wanting to approach a topic before people have had a chance to calm down.

The unfortunate side-effect of this is that it breeds wild speculation. Silence reinforces tinfoil. For example, every time a user post gets caught in auto-mod, someone screams censorship. The admins took no time to address the community outside of the mods of large subreddits. All we, as normal users, heard came from hearsay and cropped image leaks. The failure to understand that a large vocal subset of users are upset of Victoria's firing is a huge misstep in regaining the community's trust.

[–]cahaseler 995ポイント996ポイント  (126子コメント)

IAMA mod here, we wouldn't ban for that.

[–]ornothumper 476ポイント477ポイント  (78子コメント)

For every 10 good mods, there is a shitty mod that treats his sub like his own little kingdom.

The fact that this little "revolution" has been coopted by the mods just goes to show how the regular users (read: content creators) are marginalized. Mods have legitimate problems with the admins - but so do the users. The censorship (shadow bans) has got to STOP.

[–]SteveRudzinski 112ポイント113ポイント  (17子コメント)

Pretty much this. Posted about the big release of one of my films in stores/cable and stuff, got a lot of love and made my jaw literally drop due to the support I got. Everyone thought it was cool a filmmaker was on /movies directly promoting his film, albeit a small budget one, and thought it was cool a redditor was in stores/amazon/etc.

So then much later I made another submission to /movies about my new and much better film getting an even bigger release and just coming out, a mod deleted it because it looked cheap and told me to post on /filmmakers. Really turned me off from ever trying to post oc/my work again.

[–]Aldfrith 1132ポイント1133ポイント  (56子コメント)

These are polite, specific questions, which deserve answers.

[–]slickdealsceo 2074ポイント2075ポイント x2 (94子コメント)

This will probably be buried in the depths of this thread, but as someone who is a steward and community advocate at Slickdeals, I thought I might be able to relay some of the insight we've garnered as we've built our community.

I was one of the original founders, former CEO, and now the Chief Product Officer and as such I've had the opportunity to put a lot of process in place, as well as help ask the right questions whenever we do things. Naturally all communities have their nuances and differences, but in the end it boils down to respect. Respect the community: honor your users and content contributors for the work and effort they do.

Often this results in us taking a tradeoff in what we call "Technical Debt vs Community Debt" where instead of creating friction for our users, we take on a technical burden instead. For instance, we launched a redesign recently, and instead of forcing everyone over, we maintained a classic version of the website, and told ourselves that we would maintain two versions of the site for the foreseeable future, and do our best to improve the redesigned version to the point that it compels people to switch ("lets make it so much better that they willingly switch").

We often sit down and ask ourselves the following questions, in no particular order or priority:

  1. Is what we're doing impacting the way the community uses the website? How does it impact all the different types of users: casual users, frequent visitors, lurkers, content contributors, power users, etc.
  2. Are you moving someone's cheese? Are you changing something that users are very used to or have been conditioned to? Is there a way to transition it smoothly?
  3. Does it impact the way our mods use the website? How about our editors, or other internal staff?
  4. Does it impact the way our content contributors use the website?
  5. Does it impact the integrity, trustworthiness, or authenticity of our brand, content or community, even if its just the perception of such?
  6. Does it impact the sense of community, their sense of ownership, pride or involvement with the website?
  7. Are you addressing the needs of the community, especially ones that were explicitly requested? Did you make a tradeoff? If possible, can you address both your goals and the communities needs at the same time? At the very least, do not ignore what your community is asking for.
  8. What do you anticipate the negative feedback to be like or about? How will you respond to it?
  9. Are you releasing a "complete" product (is it finished?), if not: what is missing and why did you choose to omit things?
  10. How are you communicating these changes or reasons to the community? Did you solicit their feedback before, during and after the change? We've learned that communication is key: frequent and open communication. Users may not always agree with us, but they are usually reasonable and will at least understand it if you explain why you need to do something. One of the best ways to manage change, in my opinion, is to solicit that feedback and actually act on it quickly. You wont make everyone happy, but the fact that you listened, considered and ultimately acted lets the community know that you're listening and working -with- them.
  11. What is the plan immediately after the change? Who will handle interacting with the community, collecting the feedback and making action items for them? Do you have resources set aside to quickly respond to the user feedback and fix bugs or issues as quickly as possible to minimize the risk/impact to the community?

Admittedly, we're not perfect either, but we've learned over the past years that if you're willing to engage with your community, they can be pretty cooperative and understanding, so long as you actually put a good faith effort into taking their feedback, listening to their concerns and being responsive in a timely manner. And as you probably noticed, since /u/ekjp actually communicated here, the nature of the responses overall is markedly less hostile - because once you connect with someone on a personal level they become much more reasonable.

Edit: I don't deserve the gold, but thank you kind stranger! But one more thing I'll say is that the community is vocal in threads like these because they've invested into this community and they feel a part of it. View people's feedback as passionate (even if it's harsh) because they care, and because they want things to improve.

[–]slickdealsceo 630ポイント631ポイント  (24子コメント)

One more thing: our business is successful because of a handful of content contributors.

I'd imagine the majority of your visitors are lurkers or just commenters, and a small percentage of your active contributors (who are likely also the most vocal) contribute the majority of your popular content.

That being said, we must not fall into the trap of saying that these vocal proponents are a small minority: they may be if you look at it at a pure numbers standpoint, but if they are your core contributor base, you cannot just dismiss their needs and concerns.

[–]Razorasadsid 144ポイント145ポイント  (1子コメント)

People havn't commented on this, but I'm glad you posted this. Interesting perspective and the right attitude towards a community. Tough to do, but doable. A+ post.

[–]push3r 145ポイント146ポイント  (10子コメント)

I think you've made the understandable error of assuming that the people currently operating Reddit are rational people interested in Reddit as a Community rather than Reddit as a Platform.

Unfortunately they don't seem to share your insight that the Platform is only as valuable as the Community.

The founders of Reddit were successful because they had a Community focus, but were limited by their inability to transition to a financially self-sustaining model. It now seems that the pendulum has swung too far in the other direction and the efforts at monetizing the Platform could kill off the very thing that gives it value.

I was there when Digg (sorta) died, and this has a similar feel. It will be interesting if there's another place that can generate the critical mass necessary for such a migration, or if that's even possible given the logistical problem Reddit's traffic volume represents.

Part of me wonders if we'd even still be here having this conversation if Voat had been able to stand up to the load.

[–]jordanlund 1475ポイント1476ポイント  (255子コメント)

I would just like to know the thought process behind not having a backup plan following the termination of a key employee. I don't expect anyone to say why Victoria was fired, that's none of my business, but there had to be a reason why that information was not communicated to the rest of the community and certainly the AMA participants of that day.

In his statement /u/kn0thing stated that AMAs would go on as scheduled, but the fact of the matter is that the AMAs scheduled to go on that day were disrupted due to Victoria's absence and the entire kerfuffle was created when an AMA participant was not being contacted and was forced to message the mods to find out what was going on, which triggered their reaction of "We don't know, what's going on?"

You acknowledge "mistakes were made", but I'd really like to know who made the mistakes and what their rationale was at the time for doing so.

It's sad when I'm being encouraged to think that the best case scenario is merely incompetence. Did people responsible for the firing not know there were AMAs going on that day? Did they not know who the AMAs were with and as a result were not able to reach out? Why didn't they know?

These are some pretty basic questions that need to be answered and resolved if you want to re-build trust with the community.

EDIT guys... guys... /u/kn0thing is TRYING to answer my question honestly, please stop downvoting him.

https://www.reddit.com/r/announcements/comments/3cbo4m/we_apologize/csu6y0z

[–]nmezib 635ポイント636ポイント  (26子コメント)

Keep in mind: it wasnt just chooter being let go... Kickme444 (the guy who started the Reddit gifts exchange and currently the largest gift exchange in the world) was also let go. This was just months after he moved his family from SLC to SF.

That's like firing Santa Claus.

[–]DuhTrutho 334ポイント335ポイント  (6子コメント)

Hmm... the two people who held positions in charge of the most easily monetizable parts of the website were fired...

I wonder if that could mean something?

[–]InSane_We_Trust 69ポイント70ポイント  (1子コメント)

Well, I "read" (I don't know how true it is) that there was resistance to possible monetizable change ideas brought forth, because they thought it would make the sub worse. And termination was a result of "insubordination." Again, don't know how true it is, but it does make some sense if your boss is an asshole who doesn't value your opinion and expertise.

[–]mutchcassidy 67ポイント68ポイント  (6子コメント)

Did he move his family specifically for the job? That's one of my biggest fears — moving to a seriously expensive city for work and then unexpectedly losing the job. Shit.

[–]WellHeresMyFourthAcc 34ポイント35ポイント  (2子コメント)

Probably. Yishan (CEO pre-Apaocalypse) made it mandatory for all reddit employees to relocate to SanFran. Victoria was also the last holdout in reddit NYC.

[–]ElectricParkour 401ポイント402ポイント  (28子コメント)

"I would just like to know the thought process behind not having a backup plan following the termination of a key employee. I don't expect anyone to say why Victoria was fired"

This exactly. I understand no disclosure but the Reddit staff seemed very ill prepared for her absence.

[–]Isogen_ 293ポイント294ポイント  (10子コメント)

They weren't just ill prepared, it seems like the admins had no clue as to what Victoria was actually doing/her job responsibilities. It's a pretty clear sign of terrible management.

[–]KimberlyInOhio 44ポイント45ポイント  (1子コメント)

That's my thought exactly, and why i signed the petition. If you are going to fire a key employee with no transition plan, that's poor management. And if you don't KNOW that a key employee is a key employee, then you don't deserve to be running a company.

[–]snorlz 782ポイント783ポイント  (63子コメント)

I'd point out that /u/kn0thing didnt just say AMAs would go as planned, he said the reason they didnt have time to tell mods was because they were too busy taking care of AMA guests. Which was proven false when the AMA guests tweeted angrily about how their AMAs died mid sentence.

Thats also the conversation where /u/kn0thing told us to fuck off essentially

[–]Simple_Tymes 2151ポイント2152ポイント  (116子コメント)

The average users don't care about moderator tools. What matters to the passionate non-mod reddit community is:

PAID CONTENT: Will AMA and other reddit subs have content paid by sponsors? Will you disclose if reddit receives money for specific corporate posts to receive higher placement/votes? How far are you willing to go to monetize reddit?

CENSORSHIP: Will you delete subs based on advertisers' requests? Will you ban users who don't agree with specific speech/content guidelines?

POOR MANAGEMENT: The firing of Victoria may, in fact, be completely justified. But the pure business of firing the head of AMAs (arguably Reddit's highest profile sub) was simply terrible management. Why didn't you know how your business is run? Why didn't you have a transition strategy in place for Victoria's departure? Why didn't she introduce her replacement to her important clients/mods? How is this not business 101?

TRUST: Reddit is run by the good will of unpaid moderators. How can they trust you that their content won't be regulated based on corporate sponsorship? The rumors regarding Victoria's firing over disagreement about turning AMA into a money machine must be addressed. And "we don't discuss firings" isn't good enough -- what is Reddit's plan for the future of the AMAs? And why should we trust you to continue to support a site that doesn't seem to respect your intelligence?

Simply, if these issues aren't addressed, then it's time to move somewhere else. If Reddit wants to turn the community into an advertiser platform (and do it in the most unprofessional, mismanaged way) then there's no sense in supporting a site that no longer shares our beliefs. Why should we trust you to do the right thing?

Edit: for Yishan and kn0wing:

LEADERSHIP: CEOs are the public face of a company. Good CEOs give investors and customers confidence in the company. While toxic CEOs bring companies crashing down. So what does Ellen bring to Reddit? Her previous work history is mired in controversy, as is her husband's. They've both been universally destructive of the companies they were part of, as well as exhibiting questionable morals and ethics. So what qualities or assets did Ellen bring to the table to get the job at reddit? Her hiring -- and subsequent defense by Yishan and kn0wing -- doesn't speak well to the decisions that are driving the company. What value does Pao possess that makes her, despite her personal and professional toxic qualities, a value to reddit?

INTERIM: Ellen Pao has been called an "interim ceo" though she's quoted as saying she'll leave "over her dead body." Isn't her mismanagement of AMAs and her role as the public face of the company, losing users and potentially money, cause for letting her go? Why isn't now the perfect time to end her temporary employment and find a real CEO?

FOUNDATION: Wouldn't reddit be better served as a foundation similar to wikipedia?

[–]notcaffeinefree 268ポイント269ポイント  (8子コメント)

What's funny/sad about the points made by Ellen is that they really address none of your points. Which at the root are probably the biggest issues people have.

[–]TheAngelW 160ポイント161ポイント  (6子コメント)

I'm starting to think Reddit needs to be taken care of by a foundation, wikipedia-style, with full transparency and no risk of financially motivated decision.

On my part I'd be happy to chip in every year as I do with wikipedia.

[–]fernandotakai 934ポイント935ポイント  (43子コメント)

you know what's funny about censorship? one of reddit's core values is "Allow freedom of expression" (as well as "Be stewards, not dictators. The community owns itself.").

another core value? "Default to transparency, and when you can’t be transparent, be honest.".

the hypocrisy is so strong it hurts.

[–]Thrug 35ポイント36ポイント  (0子コメント)

The firing of Victoria may, in fact, be completely justified. But the pure business of firing the head of AMAs (arguably Reddit's highest profile sub) was simply terrible management. Why didn't you know how your business is run? Why didn't you have a transition strategy in place for Victoria's departure? Why didn't she introduce her replacement to her important clients/mods? How is this not business 101?

This absolutely is Business 101. Reddit reeks like a holdover from the worst part of the dotcom bubble that has been propped up for years by spectacular amounts of work from the community.

Clearly none of them have any idea how to run a business, nor conduct appropriate PR, nor protect the brand. It's like a bunch of twenty-somethings, sitting around in their smoke-filled rumpus room wearing "geeks rul3" t-shirts, acting surprised that people expect professionalism.

Any business manager in a real company would have been summarily sacked if they had displayed even half the amateurish incompetence of the Reddit admins.

(Please note their sacking would have involved a formal transition plan, and a public announcement of the transition to maintain trust and brand equity).

[–]burbod01 62ポイント63ポイント  (8子コメント)

This should be the top comment. I just want a site that gives me real information instead of being guided by corporate interests.

[–]imh 358ポイント359ポイント  (8子コメント)

Since the admin responses are getting so downvoted, can the commenters asking questions please edit their questions to include the responses? That way we can see them without having to click a bazillion "load more comments" buttons?

[–]lolimse 1048ポイント1049ポイント  (16子コメント)

You should also make a post over at /r/tifu.

[–]Darkgh0st 1002ポイント1003ポイント  (11子コメント)

No, the people in that sub think they did something wrong.

Edit- PC Mag said it best: This is all unemotional corporate bullshit speak that companies tell their employees. This won't blow over & we aren't your employees.

[–]cahaseler 2549ポイント2550ポイント  (310子コメント)

Hi Ellen,

/r/IAMA mod here. First, thank you for finally making a statement about this on reddit.

Second, can you go into more detail about the direction you see for celebrity participation on Reddit in a post-Victoria age? Alexis has made some comments to us behind the scenes about your ideas to encourage celebrity participation beyond AMAs, but I'd love to have the conversation in a more public space where everyone can participate.

[–]MarkNUUTTTT 2338ポイント2339ポイント  (87子コメント)

And if we could call this the Reddit post-Victorian Era, I would be soooooo happy.

[–]vertigo1083 410ポイント411ポイント  (62子コメント)

So, we are in Year 0- P.V. ?

[–]Delta3191 424ポイント425ポイント  (58子コメント)

In health care PV means 'per vagina.'

I'm just saying this because for me, things got awfully weird for a second there.

[–]Bright_Side_Of_Lyfe 65ポイント66ポイント  (26子コメント)

Could you give an example of "per vagina" used in context? I'm really curious as to how I can incorporate this into my daily language.

[–]Ristarwen 69ポイント70ポイント  (17子コメント)

It's for medications. For example, "PO" means per os, meaning that a medication is taken by mouth. "PV" would mean a medication taken vaginally (such as medication for infections, or certain contraceptives).

[–]Binky216 919ポイント920ポイント  (102子コメント)

Okay, so I'm going to go ahead and ask my questions regards to the current state of Reddit. As I see it, there are a few issues that need to be addressed publicly ans specifically. These are all based on the userbase "perceptions." Not being in any loop to the recent drama, these are all just what I'm getting based on they hype going on. I'd love your response to the following issues:

  1. Censorship - There's a fine line between making Reddit a "safe" place and making Reddit a place where you dare not ever offend. Part of Reddit's appeal is that here is a place where you can voice your opinions and hopefully find others to discuss topics with. Currently fatpeoplehate is banned, but what if someday there's an "up in arms" issue between (as only an example) the atheist and religious subreddits. Do we start banning groups because SOMEONE might take offense to the existence of specific subreddits. When do we start banning, when do we just ignore? I don't have an answer on when it is and isn't appropriate to remove groups, but I'd think it's better to put things in the hands of the individual users / groups than censoring anything site-wide. If I don't want to see fatpeoplehate, give me tools to block it completely...

  2. Trust - There's definitely a trust issue going on. As you've stated, the person who asked the offensive Jesse Jackson comment wasn't shadowbanned, but in fact deleted the account. Perception was that Reddit Admins could and would shadowban people who offend/bother them. This tells me that you have a trust issue with your userbase as we're starting to see the Admins as the enemy, not the great folks who give us this cool place to hang out. I'd love to know how you plan to repair the users' trust issues. My opinion here is that there should be a lot more transparency on what Admins have and haven't done with regards to bans, censorship, and frontpage manipulations.

  3. Evil Reddit Management - There's also a perception out there that Reddit's Management (not the day-to-day Admins exactly) aren't good people. Victoria's firing has highlighted this, as have apparently other Admin firings that have come to light. I agree with your policy of not speaking to specifics about personnel issues, but Reddit and you very specifically have come across as heartless with the immediateness of these firings. The "nice" people that Reddit users tend to be really don't like the idea that Reddit might not be a great place to work and we don't want to support a place that mistreats their employees. We actually want the Admins and Users to all get along and make Reddit something special. Axing a high profile, well-liked Admin like Victoria without some sort of press release is a mistake as "we" want to make sure all her hard work and kindness to "us" wasn't just completely disregarded in this decision. In short, the Admins in general seem like nice people and we want them to make sure they're treated nicely, even when a parting of ways happens.

Those are my concerns moving forward and I'd love to see responses.

[–]brentwilliams2 245ポイント246ポイント  (46子コメント)

If I don't want to see fatpeoplehate, give me tools to block it completely...

I've never understood why they don't implement this feature. Right now, you either have everything in /r/all, or you build up your own front page from scratch. But what if I want to start with /r/all and remove subs that I don't like? And maybe add subs that I want to see more of.

[–]fireysaje 65ポイント66ポイント  (10子コメント)

If you're using Reddit is Fun you can do this.

[–]dubbage 57ポイント58ポイント  (2子コメント)

I've been on mobile so long I did not realize this wasn't naively available through the website.

Edit: Natively

[–]JonasBrosSuck 1589ポイント1590ポイント  (64子コメント)

so this is like a regular AMA, where real questions won't get answered? :/

edit: seems like they answered some questions

[–]PERIODBLOODMOUTHWASH 413ポイント414ポイント  (22子コメント)

Almost 20 minutes have gone by since her last response. Where is the team? Where are the explanations? This is probably one of the most insincere apologies I have ever seen.

[–]dibsODDJOB 383ポイント384ポイント  (5子コメント)

But she's super serious about communication this time guys. One sided, sporadic communication.

[–]w00rmy 606ポイント607ポイント  (19子コメント)

I notice it's "WE" when you acknowledge screw ups, but it's "I" when you try to turn negatives to positives and make yourself look better. Therefore, "I" don't believe a single word out of your mouth.

[–]horseyhorseyhorsey 31ポイント32ポイント  (0子コメント)

These are typical blame-deflecting weasel words. A true leader would say "I screwed up and here's what I intend to do". Pao will do nothing for this site, and would rather see it burn under her command than flourish under another's.

[–]thejellydude 663ポイント664ポイント  (22子コメント)

Look, I'm not the most active mod of /r/funny, but I've been around for a while, and I pay attention to the backroom when things like this happen. Are you really acknowledging all the issues here? And I don't just mean mine as a mod, but those of the users. Mind explaining to me how you're going to handle:

Shadowbanning and how it negatively affects content producers in niche subreddits?

The constant lack of listening to mod requests by the admins? (I still remember how much we had to fight to let /u/Kylde moderate more than just 3 defaults. That was insane.)

Restructuring the reddit site-wide rules to be more transparent and clear?

Why you aren't working with the current modtools providers on how to integrate their product? (They've said time and again they would love for you to steal from them)

How you think Krispykrackers, working alone, will be enough for 6,000+ mods? We've already said we don't think this is going to work, and I've heard no response to this.

And that's just the tip of the iceberg. It's hard for me to take a post like this serious when you don't address any of the issues that have been outstanding, but only the ones brought up by the recent event.

[–]JustAnotherGuyPoopin 111ポイント112ポイント  (0子コメント)

you don't address any of the issues that have been outstanding, but only the ones brought up by the recent event.

This is all damage control and nothing more. Pay it lip service and hope it all blows over in a week or so. "Pics or it didn't happen" See, I'm funny and can engage the community, so we're all good, right?

EDIT: I don't know what I did to that link, but it's fixed now.

[–]BellyFullOfSwans 4683ポイント4684ポイント x5 (1219子コメント)

Krispykrackers is the Admin who shadowbanned my first account for posting a business' phone number and called it "doxxing".

I had a 3 year old account with over 30K karma, over 10 Redditgifts gift exchanges, months of gold given and received (with years still on the books I never got back), a large friends list, etc...banned because I posted the number of a business. I didnt start a witch hunt or say anything bad about the business....I wasnt promoting the business....still, it was seen as doxxing and without anybody else hearing my case, I was shadowbanned (and not notified about it).

When I did figure out what had happened and why I was suddenly talking to myself, I had to look up ways of getting a hold of Reddit. They dont exactly have a customer service hotline (you know, like real businesses with real customers do).

That was a pain, but was able to finally reach somebody. It was Krispykrackers. Her one word reply? "Why do you think it is OK to post personal information?"

And that was it....I never heard another word, I never got an answer back from Reddit Gold about my paid-for months of gold I still had...and /u/gekokujo was lost to me over a non-issue.

There was no accountability, no transparency, and no recourse for grievance. As a Reddit Gold user at the time, I was a PAYING CUSTOMER...and as you could have seen from my comment history then (or now), I am not a troll.

Leaving Krispykrackers in charge of fixing your out-of-control staff and unfair practices is worse than letting the fox run the henhouse. Foxes arent evil, they just eat chickens. On the other hand, humans like Krispykrackers have their own sense of social justice and a license to be judge/jury/executioner with no witnesses and only the shadowbanned-mute voices of her opposition to speak up.

There is no solution as long as Krispykrackers is playing a major part. She is as big of a part of the problem as Pao herself and I can prove that (with my own experience and that of others...some involving chat logs from past controversies).

Fix the problem....dont promote the problem to a place where she will further abuse her power and your site.

EDIT - Thanks for the comments, guys. I did get a response from KrispyKrackers that is hidden in the comments below. As thanks for her response and in the spirit of fairness, it definitely deserves to be seen. I apologize for any bad formatting, but I dont think Ive linked a comment before. Also...in the comment above it says that I had "years" remaining on my Gold. Nobody has called me on that yet, but it was just a simple typo and should read "months" instead. Going to leave it up as to not appear tricksy.

KrispyKracker's response

[–]Ryanisreallame 990ポイント991ポイント  (28子コメント)

/u/Krispykrackers should comment on this and personally give an explanation. They're already commenting in this thread as it is.

[–]moreteam 440ポイント441ポイント  (19子コメント)

She did, but the votes in this thread make it hard to see: https://www.reddit.com/r/announcements/comments/3cbo4m/we_apologize/csu89m8

(Sorry for hijacking your comment but it's the highest voted right now)

[–]BeatMastaD 66ポイント67ポイント  (0子コメント)

Too bad with the impossible mod tools reddit provides she wont be able to find a conversation that long ago.

[–]boobookittyfuck69696 705ポイント706ポイント  (9子コメント)

no accountability, no transparency, and no recourse for grievance.

[–]rotzooi 2364ポイント2365ポイント x2 (108子コメント)

As soon as I saw this "apology" (lol - we're soooorrrryyy) with the names of Ellen, Krispy, and Deimorz, all of whom I have labeled in RES with an "unfavorable" fuchsia color, I knew this was the Triumvirate of Shitting on Users doing damage control.
Nothing more. They really don't give a fuck, apparently. Not about the users and apparently not even about running a perfectly decent site into the ground.

[–]Monkstar1 1666ポイント1667ポイント  (27子コメント)

Her one word reply? "Why do you think it is OK to post personal information?"

It wouldn't be Reddit unless somebody pointed out this is more than a one word reply.

[–]TheQuon 674ポイント675ポイント  (23子コメント)

This "apology" came right after she realized that 150k signatures on a petition to remove her won't look good at her next board meeting. lol

[–]sepros 175ポイント176ポイント  (4子コメント)

Her one word reply? "Why do you think it is OK to post personal information?"

Dude that's like 11 words

[–]supergecko 654ポイント655ポイント  (20子コメント)

But she's SORRY.

[–]ApolloThneed 510ポイント511ポイント  (6子コメント)

"We screwed up. And we're here to ignore your questions to prove that we're better at screwing up than all of our competitors combined. Now go buy some gold, peasant"

[–]Large_banana_hammock 36ポイント37ポイント  (1子コメント)

Could you upload the described chat logs if you get the chance? Not that I don't believe you, I just would be interested in seeing exactly what people said.

Edit: Never mind, that comment from /u/krispykrackers works too.

[–]Muaddibisme 134ポイント135ポイント  (22子コメント)

Hi Ellen,

I am certain that you realize much of the userbase (or at least enough of the userbase ) is upset enough that your words are meaningless to them. Or at least too little too late.

I don't have any direct investment in the current situation but it does effect me and all of reddit.

You and the administrative team have made several decisions starting before you came to reddit that the community has openly opposed. Yet you ignored them completely, not even addressing their legitimate concerns. Sometimes, mocking them in private (always be careful what you and your team put to ink).

This reminds me quite a bit of the windows 8 launch. No one was surprised by window 8's failure because the community had been telling Microsoft for quite some time that win8 was not what they wanted, that it was laid out in a way that they didn't want, and that it would fail if they released it. They didn't listen.

I feel that Reddit is at the same crossroads. The community has definitely been telling you how they feel and you have ignored them and in some cases mocked them. You are walking a dangerous path that will likely lead to significant brand damage at the very least.

To save what you can you need to step back from your title and salary and spend some time becoming a redditor. The community has asked you for specific items and you need to do more than post a generalized CYA message.

I realize that any changes will take time and most of reddit does as well. However, if you want the community to see your words are more than another hollow pile of crap, post your goals and how you are going to meet them, not just that you have goals. Address the specifics with specific language. Engage yourself in teh community instead of standing apart from it.

Reddit doesn't need a CEO, it needs a 'lead redditor'. Think on that for the good of us all.

Many specific items can be found in other posts in this thread and I am sure that the couple I post here are already covered but I think that starting with these is how to start.

1) End Shadowbans.

Do it today. Stop it immediately. Don't wait. If a user is to be removed from a sub or from reddit in general there needs to be a process, not teh whim of an admin.

Someone to be banned should be informed before the ban is permanent. The ban must be reviewed by another party and the person to be banned needs to be able to defend themselves.

Yes, there are people who need to be banned. Yes, admins have full control over who can do what on reddit. No, you don't owe anyone any of this. However, it only takes one wrongful ban to enrage your user base and there has already been many more than one.

The temper of an mod should never screw over a user. Put a process in place and use it.

2) Solidify rules for subs and enforce them.

The most recent of all of this is of course FPH and the fallout that ensued. I don't support FPH but it does expose a giant issue with reddit and not for the first time (merely the most recent).

If you are going to ban subs (and really posts as well) you must have a solid set of guidelines by which you judge such things and it must be applied evenly to all subs. No matter who they are or how big they are or who mods them. You simply can't have it any other way.

Either all is permitted or what is not permitted but be the same for everyone.

Again, yes reddit has the right to do whatever it wants. However, your userbase expects an even application of the rules.

3) More than words.

If you had issued an apology long ago none of this would be an issue. However, you didn't. You even went so far s to talk to others before dealing with your userbase. I saw in one of your other replies that you blamed downvoting as to why. Yet, you can make a sticky post to the front page. There really was no reason for you not to address this a couple days ago, or the FPH crap the day after it happened.

However, you didn't. Instead you allowed the pot to stew. Now your words will fall on deaf ears (eyes?) and you have already hemorrhaged users. It isn't going to destroy reddit, At least not without further blundering, but backtracking at this point will be very difficult.

You need to do more than make a couple posts.

What I suggest is that you take these threads and gather the issues the community want addressed then make a post with those items and what specific steps you will take to address them, with an expected timeline.

This will be a significant amount of work but it is back logged work whose deadline is long past.

_

I don't want to see reddit die and I don't want to see it transformed into digg or similar). You must allow your community and moderators to drive your decision, not to try to make decisions to drive your mods and community.

I truly hope that more comes of this than empty promises and CYA postings. The opportunity for you to change the communities perception is at hand but how you handle it will determine everything and so far it doesn't look favorable.

-Muad'Dib

[–]the_human_porch 274ポイント275ポイント  (5子コメント)

Ellen,

This makes me sad.

I am not a power user, a content creator or a person in the vocal majority. What i am is a user in the silent minority. I click ad links, stick to some default subs and my gaming sub reddits. I contributed to secret santa, bought gold on various other accounts and mostly mind my own business. I am a lurker.

But i have no information out there on whats going on besides what the vocal majority and your haters have to say because you wont tell me how you screwed up. You say it but i see no ownership of whats been happening even in the past months let alone years.

So eventually people like me who wont tell you how disappointed they are will just start to leave. I am not a mod, i am not a avid content creator. But i also got the feeling i am not important, i may be one drop in the bucket but those other drops will soon feel the same way too.

All i saw the past couple of months is a badly planned, badly thought out execution of ideas that seemed to be planned to piss off reddit. With no explanation to the silent user who will pick up a pitchfork because everyone else is.

I feel like you cheated on me, and i dont know if i can continue to trust you. We need counseling badly.

[–]Cartossin 305ポイント306ポイント  (28子コメント)

This sounds very much like you're only admitting that you screwed up by not communicating your bad decisions to mods.

The real things that piss everyone off are:

  • Censorship. Users get shadowbanned for clearly stupid reasons. One of them was banned for replying to one of your comments. Subreddits get banned for brigading when they clearly aren't. Many could argue that fatpeoplehate didn't stop brigading, but what about all the subreddits inspired by fph that promise to ban brigading that also got banned. I see a cowardly administration with the "ban first and ask questions later" attitude.
  • Eliminating Victoria's position. Notice I am not complaining about the firing of Victoria herself. I agree that you can't talk about employees, but you certainly can address concerns about how celebrity AMAs will happen without this position. For all we know, Victoria was fired and deserved to be. Fine, but where is her replacement?

You're apologizing for things that are secondary to our main concerns and basically saying you're going to keep making bad decisions.

edit: grammars

[–]turtleattacks 309ポイント310ポイント  (137子コメント)

Why would anyone give reddit gold to the CEO of reddit?

[–]Agentbolt 320ポイント321ポイント  (6子コメント)

Sure, fine, this is a very nicely PR-crafted response. Instead of saying "we'll try harder" in one sentence, it's been done in a few paragraphs. Let's stop to consider how badly this has all been bungled up till now, this just looks good in comparison.

Ellen, I'm a pretty typical Reddit user. Fairly casual, I mostly stick to the default subs, and I'm not a foaming-at-the-mouth zealot trying to get you canned. Having said that, I'm not going to be able to stop supporting the mini-revolt going on unless a few things are addressed.

  • I'm not of the opinion you should have spent your weekend here placating us, but I'm still not seeing any explanation of WHY the Admins have let things get so bad here. We'd be a lot more likely to accept an answer of "We're so sorry, we'll try harder" if we knew what was different last time (from the other 245 times we've heard this)

  • Again, it's hard to take anything you say terribly seriously if your reaction to the petition is to stick your fingers in your ears and go "la la la" as loud as you can. Almost 200,000 people have demanded you step down, you need to address why a LARGE percentage of your readership should drop this demand. Additionally, you're doing yourself no favors by insisting that by and large, the Reddit community is perfectly happy with the way things are going. Clearly, we're not.

  • I am not okay with people being harassed, brigaded, or abused. However, I would like to see you address the concerns that Reddit's free speech ideals will be neutered to make the site more profitable. I'm not asking for concrete details, but I'd like to know how exactly you plan to draw the line between abusive/illegal behavior, and stuff you (or other Admins) really dislike but won't prohibit on here. Just how "safe" a space do you intend to make Reddit?

[–]SinaSyndrome 103ポイント104ポイント  (13子コメント)

How's the search for a new CEO coming along?

[–]spank859 87ポイント88ポイント  (2子コメント)

Ellen, you say the vast majority of users don't care about the drama. You are wrong. When the people who are opposing you are doing a damn fine job the rest of us are just chipping in here and there. We don't have to all go apeshit when the message is clear and cut and not being disagreed about. We want you the fuck out. Your only goal is to monetize and our goal is to not monetize. There is no way to bring in sponsors and not lose the key element of this site. Real news with no paid for biased. Yes we like cat pics but for a lot of us this is our news outlet that we don't want becoming FOX or CNN. There is no way to do that with some corporation paying the bills. This is not going to end well for you either way unless you gracefully bow out and let us keep our site the way we fucking like it. You know the way that brought all these people here. The way we became a major opinion in everything. GO AWAY

[–]FunkyFarmington 333ポイント334ポイント  (9子コメント)

Reddit has gone corporate. Your goals are now at odds with the reason we all come here. Everything you say now sounds contrived, and you (clearly) lack the PR skills to change that. The way to change it was to not have done this in the first place.

Here's to waiting for the next Reddit. The cycle will complete soon.

[–]RedditAckount 272ポイント273ポイント  (4子コメント)

This is a simulated discussion.

The damage is done, the community is now weary. Monetize, make your money, and move on to the next "Reddit" style website. If money is your goal (and it is) then just do it and don't pretend to care long enough just to pander to your sites users, the ones who actually are responsible for the creation and submission of the content of your site.

Many of us are already done. Moving on. In 5 years, the future of reddit will be nothing but astroturfers, clickbait articles, the exact same wikipedia links posted to til, and premium memberships.

We can't trust you not to dismantle, edit, delete, or hide content that we deem to share. We'll find another outlet, another 4chan, another reddit, another anonymous board. Communities will always find a way to come together. Your model was good, but your goals have changed.

You've lost our trust. You've lost our input. You're on your own.

[–]transpo6 14ポイント15ポイント  (0子コメント)

Could not have said this better. I've been a lurker here for 4 years, user for 2-3. I would lie if I said this whole controversy didn't matter to me. /u/ekjp I have not but disappointment for you and what you've done my and our beloved community. When voat comes back online, I'll be eager to see if that's a place I can find a new home at.

[–]Elle-Elle 1798ポイント1799ポイント  (222子コメント)

In 2010, I won the Reddit pumpkin carving contest with my Doc Brown pumpkin from my now deleted account /u/ooolalalauren

I was supposed to win a t-shirt. The mods of the contest assured that I would get it. I never did. They told me that /u/alienth was the admin in charge of getting that to me. I contacted him. Never got a response.

So, I don't care about Victoria or any of this. I'm just butthurt that I didn't get my shirt. That's the real issue here.


EDIT: Getting my shirt!! Thank you, /u/kn0thing! Lolol I can't believe it.

FOUND! My Doc Brown Pumpkin

and

u/driftw00d found the original thread! He recognized my pumpkin because he was one of the other winners who didn't receive a shirt

Oh my God, people. I posted this with no intention of upvotes, replies, and definitely not a t-shirt. It's been five years. I posted this as a light-hearted comment in contrast to the serious and dramatic replies to Ellen's apology. I just wanted to make someone smile amongst the drama.

[–]VoatWasDown 186ポイント187ポイント  (7子コメント)

This injustice will not stand! If you make a petition, I will sign it.

Together, we can change the world get you your shirt.

[–]kethryvis 66ポイント67ポイント  (5子コメント)

This'll get buried, but hey. May as well add to the pile. Not that anyone is going to read this low.

I wrote my master's thesis on online communities, and specifically on the communication (or lack of) between online communities and the companies that run the sites they gather on. I focused on LiveJournal, which a lot of us remember for having a lot of user insurrections much like what we're seeing here.

As I wrote, I made a brief article that I titled "Top 9 things to never do to your online community." These were brief takeaways, things I noticed being repeated over and over again (as an anthropologist, I tend to look for patterns). Reddit broke SO MANY of these in this instance. In fact.. pretty much all of them.

1. Don't bury the lead.

You took this action on a Thursday, right before a long weekend, and as far as anyone can tell, didn't announce it anywhere. The more you try to hide something, the more a community will dig and dig and dig to find out what happened. And when you do it on a holiday, you've just given them prime time to do so. What do we do on our weekends but sit on your site and create content?

2. Don't talk down to them.

Several of the responses from Reddit admins sounded fairly patronizing. Don't do that. Treat your users how you want them to treat you. And remember... we can smell bullshit in a statement like a fart in a car. Don't make flowery promises. This statement isn't overly flowery.. but there's some stuff in there making my whiff detector go off. Be careful here.

3. Don't underestimate your community.

This sort of goes with #1. Don't think that they won't notice when something happens, don't think they won't get upset when a wildly popular member of your staff is fired without warning or reason. Don't think they'll just sit on their hands going "well. that's a bummer." If 15 years of online communities have taught me anything, it's that they don't sit on their hands.

4. Don't ignore your community and its opinions.

Mods had a really hard time getting answers. Considering they do the bulk of the work on your site, that's a really bad move.

5. Don't just give them lip service.

This post is better than most "we fucked up" posts i've seen, you've given two concrete things that are already in place, and another that is promised, but could still be vaporware. You're "committed to talking more often with the community" but you don't say how that's going to happen. And your own site makes this difficult; anything you say is going to be downvoted, which means no one will see it. That's a recipe for disaster right there.

6. Don't keep things from them.

We understand that you can't go into details on why Victoria was let go. Personnel issues are highly confidential, and pretty much everyone gets that. But finding a way to address what happened and give answers while still preserving confidentiality. It's hard. But I have to think you're all fairly smart people and can figure out how to make that happen. Or at least get out in front of it before everyone throws a fit. Then YOU control the story, and aren't scrambling to respond.

7. Don't believe you're the center of your user's world.

Sure you're a big part of a lot of people's lives, but you're not the only place. If people get pissed off at you, they're not just going to keep it here. They're going to go to all the other places online they hang out and bitch. i saw stories on reddit, on Twitter, on Facebook, Tumblr... everywhere people hang out online, people were talking about the #RedditRevolt. That takes a minor kerfuffle and turns it huge, fast.

8. Don't take your users for granted.

You're the current "thing" but the "next thing" is already on the horizon. Don't think you can do what you want, especially if it's outside the communities ideals, and they'll still stick around, or you'll attract the ones that will agree with you. Replacement doesn't work. Because once you have a reputation for not listening to your users, that'll stick, no matter who agrees with you or not.

9. Don't just take the attitude of "we'll never make everyone happy, so fuck it, we'll do what we want."

This is the most dangerous attitude to take. You don't seem to be doing it.. yet. I just hope you don't ever do so.

takes off pith helmet, hops off soapbox

edited for formatting

[–]ucantsimee 1324ポイント1325ポイント  (63子コメント)

You've been promising mod tools for longer than I care to remember and they are still "coming soon." At this point your word alone means nothing. Actions will be the way to make it up to the community. Not words. Get to work.

[–]xwm 787ポイント788ポイント  (75子コメント)

This reads very much like a "This is turning out to be way worse than we thought, how can we string them along while we slap something together last minute to appease them."

The last few weeks has shown precisely what the admins/glorious leader feel towards users: condescension. This play doesn't read any different.

[–]_VicBoss 344ポイント345ポイント  (10子コメント)

Haha, why do people think an apology means anything in this age of digital liars? Takes a 150,000 signature change.org to get even an empty, transparent apology out of you.

[–]so_funny_it_hurts 93ポイント94ポイント  (3子コメント)

Better yet, an apology where blame is only laid on the broad shoulders of the 'we' not the 'I'. To me it sounds half hearted and out of touch.

[–]xdrg 620ポイント621ポイント  (40子コメント)

i gave up on this site when i heard ekjp on npr talking about how reddit was no longer meant to be a "free speech" platform.

i'm just waiting until the dust settles to see what the best alternative will be.

[–]killmachine91 166ポイント167ポイント  (10子コメント)

"Let me go apologize to newspapers and shit first and then go to our actual community and apologize last"

This is damage control at it's finest. There's a reason your resignation petition is 150k strong.

[–]desmunda1 5697ポイント5698ポイント  (3463子コメント)

So anyway why did you go on to give detailed statements to thirdparty newsfeeds first, before speaking to us? The place with the tagline 'the frontpage of the internet'? The people you slighted in the first place? Hell even buzzfeed got info before this statement from you...

Edit: Ellen responded to me, but I anticipate she will be heavily downvoted so here's the reply

"It was hard to communicate on the site, because my comments were being downvoted. I did comment here and was communicating on a private subreddit. I'm here now."

[–]Phrostbite 4608ポイント4609ポイント  (302子コメント)

The buzzfeed one hurt the most.

[–]Protuhj 5575ポイント5576ポイント  (248子コメント)

10 Ways You Won't Believe That reddit Users Can Go Fuck Themselves!

[–]JustAPaddy 707ポイント708ポイント  (50子コメント)

Number 4 will shock you!

[–]Llim 1690ポイント1691ポイント  (437子コメント)

Publicity. Trying to do immediate damage control for the media

[–]-impostura- 892ポイント893ポイント  (225子コメント)

And it did work, partially. Many 3rd part sites wrote articles that portrayed redditors as the evil and Ellen Pao/admins as the victimized admins.

[–]PainMatrix 623ポイント624ポイント  (198子コメント)

Really? Everything that I saw was more sympathetic to the redditors. Then again I only get my news from reddit.

[–]usernameJW 179ポイント180ポイント  (12子コメント)

You read the news though, right?

I suspect the answer might have something to do with good reporters at major news outlets having their contact information, calling over and over to get a response and giving Reddit a deadline along the lines of "If I don't hear from you before [this time], we'll have to run the story without your input."

[–]fridgetarian 70ポイント71ポイント  (6子コメント)

Yeah, this is a perfectly good explanation for why it appeared in print first. It doesn't really explain the lack of response on reddit itself.

[–]CaptnRonn 4960ポイント4961ポイント  (871子コメント)

A few things beyond a PR statement that would restore my faith in the admins:

  1. Stop shadowbanning users - It was a tool made for spam bots, not to silence dissent. The mere fact that a perfectly legitimate user can be shadowbanned without their knowledge is ridiculous, and it has been happening more and more in the past few months/year

  2. Stop subreddit favoritism - You want to have anti-harassment rules? Great. Enforce them in every. sub. equally. Other meta-reddit subs have to use np links. Why does SRS get away with being able to post direct links with obvious brigading?

Also, /u/ekjp, as much as I would like to think that things are business as usual with you as CEO, you have made some very questionable statements regarding free speech and sexism in tech from a position that is seemingly vacant in logic. The fact that you feel you must talk to major news sites before actually acknowledging your userbase is troubling to say the least. You have done nothing to earn my trust or support, and in fact have done several things to reinforce the opposite. So... prove me wrong?

Edit: Yes I am now aware that my knowledge of np links was wrong. Thank you for informing me everyone. Not going to edit the post as the point still stands. Enforce rules across subs equally.

[–]016Bramble 1005ポイント1006ポイント  (76子コメント)

How about /r/bestof? They brigade too, but it's usually an upvote brigade. Should that be allowed? (genuine question)

[–]goatsareeverywhere 1137ポイント1138ポイント  (35子コメント)

They're also a downvote brigade too. If you have a different opinion than the bestof'd comment, prepare for -1000 karma.

[–]Infamously_Unknown 231ポイント232ポイント  (15子コメント)

They're also a gold brigade, which makes both of these concerns irrelevant to reddit.

[–]016Bramble 37ポイント38ポイント  (10子コメント)

Very true, I hadn't thought about that. A lot of the time, they are responding to an accusation or different opinion, and that guy gets the short end of the stick

[–]senatorskeletor 36ポイント37ポイント  (0子コメント)

/r/bestof has a lot of "great response to an ignorant comment about..." types of posts, which can cause downvote brigades to the poor soul with the unpopular view.

[–]hoodwink77 85ポイント86ポイント  (2子コメント)

A few days back there was a no participation link to a week old thread with few comments. Suddenly it's getting posts added.

Srd makes attempts to put a stop to popcorn pissing. Best of is almost no holds barred.

[–]Mumberthrax 1442ポイント1443ポイント  (150子コメント)

Stop shadowbanning users

for example, this sort of person: http://www.reddit.com/r/tifu/comments/351buo/tifu_by_posting_for_three_years_and_just_now/

Stop subreddit favoritism - You want to have anti-harassment rules? Great. Enforce them in every. sub. equally. Other meta-reddit subs have to use np links. Why does SRS get away with being able to post direct links with obvious brigading?

np links are not a reddit thing, they're a derpy css hack and the admins have stated (well at least some of them) that they don't support them. they've said they're working on anti-brigading tools, but I don't know more than that.

edit: funnily enough, one of the biggest issues I have with reddit is the abuses of power/tools that reddit grants to moderators (ironic because a lot of mods and powerusers controlling the discussion are making out that the biggest problem is that mods need MORE tools. tools are fine and can be used for good, and they are used for bad a lot). so regarding NP links, /r/politics for example was banning users who never posted to /r/politics simply for participating in /r/modlog which does not use NP links because they are a derpy CSS hack, and linking to other parts of reddit shouldn't be discouraged, participating as part of the greater reddit community shouldn't be discouraged. It's kind of nuts.

edit2: IMO the community needs better tools to deter these sorts of abuses of power. The simplest being the option for a subreddit to have a public moderation log like the admins created in ages past. If there were an official version, it would be great. Currently the best we've got (in my opinion) is /u/publicmodlogs which I created and /u/go1dfish created a nifty frontend for.

[–]Infamously_Unknown 869ポイント870ポイント  (85子コメント)

Holy shit, active user shadowbanned for three years? All the time spent typing comments nobody will ever see... that's just evil.

[–]Kaneshadow 651ポイント652ポイント  (27子コメント)

It's fine, I've been doing that anyway. Didn't even need the shadowban.

[–]Mumberthrax 53ポイント54ポイント  (18子コメント)

This is a huge problem with reddit, too. The early commenters get all of the upvotes and discussion in response - arrive an hour late and you're lucky to get a handful of upvotes for a relevant contribution to the discussion - arrive three hours late (i.e. once the post is on the front page) and you probably won't ever be noticed by anyone.

[–]OneLastIdea 20ポイント21ポイント  (1子コメント)

I would reply to this but its already past the three hour mark so I might as well go fuck myself.

[–]Raincoats_George 85ポイント86ポイント  (9子コメント)

Think about how that might slowly eat away at your self esteem as all your rants and well thought out comments went without a single response or acknowledgement.

You'd wake up each morning expecting to have 50 plus messages in your inbox for that controversial statement you made. But nothing. The post about your dying cat. Nothing.

Soon people in real life would pick up on your impending mental break and they too would distance themselves from you.

Finally when you convinced yourself that you were in fact invisible you would proudly rip a loud fart in a crowded elevator only to face the disgust and horror of the entire group.

But by then it wouldn't matter. You were already dead inside.

[–]apollohay 41ポイント42ポイント  (17子コメント)

I was shadow banned for a few days and I didn't know why. It sucks that I had to have a mod tell me when an auto message would have sufficed. I got banned for down voting one person too much... It was apparently considered vote manipulation even though everything that person said I didn't like so I voted accordingly. I didn't even remember that I had done that and I had done that two years before I had even been shadow banned.

[–]Mumberthrax 47ポイント48ポイント  (9子コメント)

jesus. shadowbans were supposed to be for spambots, not users voting too much, weren't they? Why has their use expanded?

How did you find out what the reason for your shadowban was?

[–]nodthenbow 65ポイント66ポイント  (22子コメント)

NP is just a css trick that is not enforced by the admins.

[–]freebytes 154ポイント155ポイント  (5子コメント)

I have decided to stay for now, but your comments related to the 'vocal minority' of Reddit are so disturbing, though. I have lost trust in Reddit. You have severely damaged the brand for me with that one comment.

The minority of Reddit posts the comments. The minority of Reddit posts the links to content. The minority of Reddit are the ones that care about the success of the site. The millions of 'unique page views per month' could care less if Reddit stopped existing. The vocal minority, though... These people are the lifeblood of the community. You cannot hand-wave their discontent and expect everything to be fine. You cannot afford to lose one loyal member. It is best to treat everyone with dignity and respect.

Do you know how Netflix started?

The genesis of Netflix came in 1997 when I got this late fee, about $40, for Apollo 13. I remember the fee because I was embarrassed about it.

Blockbuster was their own downfall. They thought they were too big to fail. It was not Redbox that caused them to fail. It was not online streaming movies that caused Blockbuster to fail. Blockbuster was their own enemy. They were arrogant and did not respect their customers.

All it takes is for the same arrogance and disrespect to continue within Reddit, and it will suffer the same fate as those that came before it. As we speak, many users are jumping to other platforms. If there was a similar, solid platform already in place that was stable and could handle the load, Reddit would be in very bad shape at this point.

You are fortunate that your vocal minority wants Reddit to succeed, and you are fortunate that your vocal minority is willing to give you even more chances even though you continue to be disrespectful and arrogant.

Edit: Changed change to chance.

[–]Vogeltanz 79ポイント80ポイント  (0子コメント)

I've been a reddit user for about three years now. I do moderate a sub, but it's very simple, and I've never had any troubles on that front.

But here's my perspective:

Ms. Pao is the lightning rod of the current upset within the community. Yet by apologizing for "the past several years" of mistakes, she is impliedly shifting blame from herself onto Reddit's prior leadership. In particular former CEO Yishan Wong.

Three or four posts on my daily feed is now controversy-related. That's not good, and I don't enjoy it. I suspect others don't as well. Media outlets are reporting the controversy, which signals to me that the unrest has at least several days if not a week or two left before it fans out.

None of us knows what's really happening internally at Reddit right now. Maybe Ms. Pao has already increased revenue 100% since her arrival. If so, who am I to say that she isn't the best candidate to become full-fledged CEO.

But then again her arrival seems to have brought multiple controversies and user dissatisfaction.

If Ms. Pao's internal leadership isn't top notch, it would be hard for me (as a hypothetical board member) to justify her current role given the recent unrest and failure to control the public-facing situation.

I'm even more troubled that her allocution is apologizing for past mistakes before her arrival -- essentially refusing to take responsibility for the current situation.

So, I'd put the question to Ms. Pao bluntly: why should you continue to serve as Reddit CEO?

[–]nuadi 49ポイント50ポイント  (1子コメント)

Right. So, here's my feedback for you, and the rest of the admin/devs/engineers/etc.

It feels like you folks are just shitting on your users. For the first time in a few years, I spent this last holiday weekend searching for new content elsewhere on the web. To put that in perspective, since I've joined Reddit, it was the first web site I opened every morning before all others, it was the only site that I received content from, and it was the last site I read before passing out due to human sleep requirements. I did not read news, tech sites, blogs, etc. unless it was linked on Reddit - until last weekend.

You are absolutely correct in that your words are nothing but that - hollow text on a screen that does nothing for my declining interest in this site's administrative direction.

You all need to seriously pull your heads out of eachother's rears and look around you. Yes, you built this site. However, this site is not yours, it's everyone's and we all power it. It seriously feels like you've all lost sight of that very simple reality, and you are walking along some yellow-bricked road to Hubris Junction on your way to Failure Town.

Stop using us, and start working with us.

[–]boobookittyfuck69696 177ポイント178ポイント  (19子コメント)

Our team is ready to respond to comments.

What team? I've been here for 15 minutes and I've already seen another 2000 replies go up. Who's reading this? Who's answering our questions??

[–]AdamKeiper 330ポイント331ポイント  (80子コメント)

Dear Ms. Pao –

In the interest of transparency, I wonder if you might answer a question or two. Setting aside any personnel matters that you understandably cannot discuss, would you please confirm or deny the claim made several days ago that Reddit, under your leadership, wishes to undertake "a bunch of highly commercial things around AMAs"? Is that characterization correct, partially correct, or entirely incorrect? And, while still eschewing any discussion of individual personnel, would you say that your colleagues — the administrators of Reddit — have largely shared that goal, or has there been substantial pushback and disagreement?

Thank you.

[–]well_golly 48ポイント49ポイント  (8子コメント)

I see you wrote about:

"Tools: ..."

"Communication: ..."

"Search: ..."

... but you forgot to make one called:

"Policy: We will trust the upvotes and downvotes of users from now on. We will never manipulate the front page, and if admins or leadership at any level tries to, that person will be immediately terminated. We will not shadowban anyone ever for anything, without giving a detailed public explanation that cites specific rules violations. We will make Reddit a 'safe space' even for terribly unpopular opinions that we deeply disagree with."

I want to help, so here's Yishan's apology from before. It's cited right there in the Washington Post article about why Reddit is having all of these problems. You could just use that apology, and sign your name on it:

“We will not ban questionable subreddits,” Reddit’s then-CEO, Yishan Wong, wrote in the aftermath of that catastrophe. “You choose what to post. You choose what to read. You choose what kind of subreddit to create and what kind of rules you will enforce. We will try not to interfere — not because we don’t care, but because we care that you make your choices between right and wrong.”

[–]7084701770 99ポイント100ポイント  (5子コメント)

I work in a larger company dealing with many large massive companies and the one thing I've learned by doing my job, and that is sticking out at me here; is Disassociating Pronouns:
"WE screwed up..."
"WE haven't..."

It concerns me that the issue as I see is we, as the whole, have pinned the problems at hand on one person, who I believe the post is by (however another problem is the lack of any sort of introduction, another Disassociating Behavior) but admittedly do not know enough about the workings of this to comfortably say so. Furthermore, this lone named actor is not owning much responsibility to the issue at hand.

What's bothering me is this feels like a very side-stepping statement; carefully crafted to appear apologetic, but in a deeper (and possibly a more subconscious level) is at least attempting to deflect the majority of the issue onto others, as in, reddit the company as a whole.

As I often say in meetings, I feel this is nothing more than a weak pandering to demands which contains not only little to no concrete answers but only stands to, at best, further muddy the view point; and at worst, push the involved parties further into a sense of disconnect and displeasure with the involved actor.

[–]DoctorDank 4215ポイント4216ポイント  (374子コメント)

Your second to last paragraph is spot on.

These are just words.

You haven't actually instituted any reforms yet. To be honest, this just feels like corporate newspeak. You're just telling us what we want to hear. I think you'd ve a better response if you actually instituted the reforms you speak of, instead of just talking about how you're going to do them.

Because talk is cheap.

But, at least you acknowledge that the way you went about dismissing Victoria was utterly tone-deaf, and very disrespectful to the (unpaid, hard-working) moderators who relied on her in order to make their subreddits the very best.

Oh wait no, you totally didn't do that either. You just say you're acknow ledging a "long history" of mistakes, without actually acknowledging them at all!

More newspeak.

So, I don't really know what to make of this "announcement." Guess we'll just have to wait and see if you put your money where your mouth is, won't we?

Edit: much thanks to /u/alloutpenguinwar for guilding my comment!

Edit 2: for those of you telling me software development takes time? No shit. I know that. That doesn't mean reddit inc couldn't have laid out at least some sort of timetable, as opposed to nebulous promises of mod tools being available in the future. And yes, you can have timetables for software development. Happens all the time. So sorry, that's not a legitimate excuse for, well, anything.

[–]FlacidPhil 1556ポイント1557ポイント  (143子コメント)

This is basically just repeating what /u/kn0thing has already said. No more news, just 'tools are coming and we'll make more announcements at you'.

[–]PitchforkEmporium 1808ポイント1809ポイント  (90子コメント)

"Popcorn tastes good"

-/u/kn0thing

[–]walt_ua 507ポイント508ポイント  (10子コメント)

''write an e-mail''

-/u/kn0thing

[–]Captain_Ambiguous 42ポイント43ポイント  (0子コメント)

"We have top men working on it. Top. Men."

-/u/kn0thing

[–]dorkrock2 110ポイント111ポイント  (6子コメント)

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-kn0thing