Someone here already has 12 subs on his own. We would be inspired to avoid the era of the power mods. Moding should involve an interest, not just collecting rings of infinity like it’s a gold rush. How can it be a good practice in the long term?
mentalhealth
shitposting
showerthoughts
linux_gaming
Stoicism
Philippines
philosophy
ArtificialIntelligence
Futurology
copypasta
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aitools
I think a larger issue is what amounts to domain squatting.
People either recreating popular subs or creating magazines of the type of content they would like to read and then not providing any themselves.
People who come across a made yet empty mag can understandable be discouraged from contributing just for somebody else (who hasn’t shown commitment to the community) to be able to control it.
Effectively it’s absentee landlordism to stake claim to names and wait for posts to come.
Perhaps a better approach would be to delete magazines with no posts so that names would always be available to people who would use them.
Hard agree. Already seeing someone make 30+ magazines with 0 subscribers aside from themselves.
I think Reddit’s /u/awkwardtheturtle is a prime example of why that is a good idea. It’s a toxic sexist supermod that made it in the news a few times already and never got punished for any of their comments towards other users & groups. These type of supermods also can act abusive across several communities. If they don’t like you, they can basically ban you in a lot of places.
Only if it’s an admin-tuneable limit. Different instances will want to handle this differently.
Yes. We don’t want another AwkwardTheTurtle or iBleeedOrange to reign supreme.
I’m all for more accountability and providing some guard rails but a per account limit will not solve much. It is trivial to have and to use multiple accounts to bypass any limits.
It is a tricky topic - power mods in and of themselves are not inherently a problem. If fact, I’d argue that people who take it upon themselves to moderate many communities (successfully) contribute more to the health of a site than the majority of users.
I suppose it is worth diving into the specifics of why a single user moderating multiple communities can be problematic. Then what can be done to address these issues.
Perhaps a tribunal system that allows the mods of other federated servers (who moderated the “same” type of content) to intervene in a conflict. I’d be worried about abuse with any automatic system, but at the very least a way to petition a site owner to step in would be helpful. A way to say “the collective federated mods believe that [@]Spez[@]kbin.social is problematic [due to exibit A, B, etc.] and it is agreed upon than they should be removed as a moderator of m/RedditMigration“
I’d support a limit, the so called “supermods” were a detriment to Reddit overall. Not to mention, as others have stated" they end up being egoistical petty kings of their fiefs. If I see gallowboob on here I’ll be right upset.
Another example. All those subs have the same moderator, next to the name is the thread, comments, post and subscribers counters.
mildlyinteresting 0 0 0 260
explainlikeimfive 0 0 0 173
interestingasfuck 0 0 0 374
damnthatsinteresting 0 0 0 220
LivestreamFail 0 0 0 16
LifeProTips 0 0 3 327
Tell me it’s a good sign.
This website should do nothing like reddit mods are. They are loser special snowflakes who ban everyone they don’t like. Also take it easy with sitewide rules. Reddit rules on their own are very strict.
Anarchy is what you want? There are sites for that, bro, no need to fuck up this place if all you want is chaos.
I don’t think this is a problem right now. I’m in favour of deferring any decision.
Right now, getting more magazines opened is more important than who mods them. Without content, there’s no users, and without users, there’s no content. If someone wants to create a dozen magazines and get the conversations kick-started, that’s a good thing.
If moderation on a new magazine is shit, people will move to a new one. The same thing happened at Reddit. r/gaming was too memy, so people made r/games. You had two large subs in r/relationships and r/relationship_advice.
The only issue in my mind has to do with continuity planning. What do we do in a few months when a hundred magazines have AWOL moderation? Who decides?
Check my other example, 8 subs open, zero content created. Those subs have not been open by someone with an interest on the subject, otherwise there would be content by now.
idk how some people want to spread themselves so thin in this way, I have 2 tiny zines to look after and that is already plenty. I think some people are just camping as well, I have visited quite a few freshly-made zines the past few days where there is no welcome, nothing posted, and the mod is not participating anywhere really. I know there has been downtime and lag and folks are busy too, but it is kind of a bummer if they are not even going to try. :/