Did you ever have that feeling on reddit of “I better word my post just right, otherwise AutoMod will take it down”? Some subs had such strict auto moderating that it was a crap shoot to post something. Not so here. I know there’s value in moderation, and I’m sure Lemmy/kbin/etc. will add more of it with time. But, for now, it was just nice to not be nervous when I was submitting a post here.
Tracking the lastest news and numbers about the #RedditMigration to open, Fediverse-based alternatives, including #Kbin and #Lemmy To see latest reeddit blackout info, see here: https://reddark.untone.uk/
Fk AutoMod. There were some subreddits I actually couldn’t post, even though I wanted to (League of Legends being one example).
I’ve made https://kbin.social/m/lolesports if you want to discuss all things League of Legends esports! This includes fantasy (no betting), fanart (no NSFW), post-game match discussion, roster news, really anything!
It started to get really overdone on the moderation side for sure.
I never had posting anxiety because I stuck mostly to small subs but I despised how automod could just do that. That said, it would be cool if we had a (smaller) automod here, before things get out of hand. We don’t need bots and trolls to ruin everything.
I wasn’t posting but I commented a lot. I can’t say I had any anxiety regarding commenting.
I had 105k comment karma so I must’ve been used to it at least, right?
I barely created posts on Reddit. Sometimes automod was a real pain in my ass, not gonna lie, but only in few specific subreddits. Although it’s true that the mood here is more friendly to create posts and/or comment in them. I don’t feel myself questioned, despised or attacked by others.
I also really, really like the ability to microblog at a magazine. A whole tab just for the casual, quick, less thought out posts that would make people sneer in disgust and smash the downvote button for having wasted their time on reddit. Probably with a “cool story bro” or “sir this is a wendy’s” on the way past. I feel a lot freer to just engage without worry here.
Though I find I’m hesitant to use this feature on communities that aren’t hosted on kbin (e.g. lemmy), knowing they’ll probably just see it as a regular post and have exactly the reaction above.
I remember in some communities when I was posting where I hadn’t submitted a new post before (I commented much more than posted), going back and forth to the rules over and over again to make sure I didn’t miss something, only to have my post removed by auto mod or a regular mod anyway, for not following some rule that wasn’t in the list of rules.
I got used to not caring about downvotes on comments much, and to not caring about hostile replies, but not the new post “did I somehow violate a rule that wasn’t in the list?” anxiety. I will not miss that at all.
(To be clear, I’m not anti-moderation or anti-mod at all, this is limited to this specific situation, which happened more often than you’d think, sadly.)
I would definitely agree that posting on reddit was difficult.
By default I feel like most posts were handled in a, remove first, ask questions later fashion.
Commenting was a bit better but there were a lot of set opinions and/or blatant misinformation.
Comment and post anxiety still exist for me here, and it probably won’t change for a king time.
Glad I’m not the only one noticing this! Didn’t realize how much it had affected me. It took me days to dip my toes in when I came here, and I still felt that ‘twitch’ waiting for the automod to slap my post down, or feeling the insta-flames or downvote parade in some of the big subs.
Absolutely. I got tired of some subs because of being unable to even talk about things they decided were immoral or wrong.
I didn’t post a lot but I was definitely anxious about commenting because if it wasn’t worded just right, someone would take it out of context and be offended by it or downvote it to hell. I remember telling someone that I loved their poems - downvoted. I corrected someone about the difference between ESAs and service dogs - cue arguments when they can just literally read the ADA (law). I apologized for getting something wrong - insults and talked down to. I also remember being told that latinx is what trans Latinos want people to use, I used it and was greatly talked down to and told I’m not a real Latino. It felt like reddit was just really hostile no matter what I did. There were many times I wrote a comment but then discarded it.
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