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Online altruists making Reddit more accessible

wired.com

66 points by spost 6 years ago · 46 comments

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jimhi 6 years ago

In 2014, the CEO Yishan Wong and lead investor Sam Altman said they were promising equity to some users of Reddit

https://www.theverge.com/2014/9/30/6874353/reddit-50-million...

Any update on this?

  • lm28469 6 years ago

    > Money can become worthless very quickly.

    Smart enough to foresee it, not smart enough to avoid it.

remote_phone 6 years ago

What is going to happen when Reddit ipo’s and the employees benefit financially from it, but the moderators who actually make reddit what it is get nothing?

  • fiblye 6 years ago

    The internet has had paid and free communities and forums forever. I can’t think of a single one where voluntary non-employee moderators got paid. Tech support forums for ten billion dollar companies also sometimes have non-employee moderators who I’m pretty sure are not paid.

  • Thorrez 6 years ago

    What about the users who post content? Are they expected to get something too? Youtube and Twitch pay people who make content, in addition to paying moderators.

  • Deimorz 6 years ago

    Nothing will happen, exactly like the last 14 years with the employees being paid salaries while users run the site for free.

    Why do you think an IPO will be treated differently?

    • notatoad 6 years ago

      (deimorz is former Reddit staff and now operates a Reddit competitor)

      • skinnymuch 6 years ago

        I don’t know how that makes a difference to his comment. Which is exactly what I was thinking.

        • notatoad 6 years ago

          i don't know that it does make a difference to his comment, but on HN it's a standard practice (that i like) to disclose when commenting on your employers and competitors.

          • RealityVoid 6 years ago

            I understand your feeling, but it's also HN standard practice to assume good faith.

            I think the first comment is quite short and, while it doesn't bring a lot to the table I think it's a feeling echoed by a many in the current community. (Not necessarily me, but the zeitgeist seems to be there). So, in this light, doing a disclosure on each and every comment is... Unreasonable, especially if it's something you feel deeply about.

            • notatoad 6 years ago

              In the vein of assuming good faith - please don't assume my comment was in bad faith. It wasn't meant as a criticism or a dismissal of his comment, just relevant context. A disclosure isn't just a disclosure of a potential bias, it's also a disclosure of relevant knowledge and experience.

              I knew some context that i thought was relevant, so I added it. I wasn't trying to pick a fight.

            • dwohnitmok 6 years ago

              They're not mutually exclusive and in fact are mutually reinforcing. As readers of a comment we are expected to read it charitably and part of that is assuming that the writer is not shilling. On the other hand we expect writers to disclose major conflicts of interest and I would categorize a direct competitor as a major conflict of interest (note I'm not calling deimorz a shill and do think his/her comment reflects a common sentiment, but I appreciate the knowledge that deimorz is working on a competitor).

              The latter breeds the trust for the former to work.

            • mattlutze 6 years ago

              There is an account profile in which you can write these things, if you're feeling like qualifying your comments is too onerous.

            • hdjejdjd 6 years ago

              Transparency is not worth it if a lot of people agree with you? Transparency is not worth it if it's something you care deeply about?

              • RealityVoid 6 years ago

                That is NOT what I wanted to say. I wanted to say that sometimes, lack of explicit discolosure can be (IMO) excused if the interest is not intentionally obfuscated and disclosure was done at some point in the past.

                That means that, in my point of view, Deimorz raised a good, but biased point while failing to fully discose the contest within his comment, and notatoad brought extra missing context. Both, good things. But I would refrain from painting Deimorz as intentionally misleading, considering this, at most, unintentionally misleading.

                • saghm 6 years ago

                  > I would refrain from painting Deimorz as intentionally misleading

                  I don't think that's what happened here; in the same way that you saw Deimorz's comment as not malicious, I didn't see the response mentioning their connection to the issue as malicious either. You mention that the "disclosure was done sometime in the past", but I had never heard of them or the site they founded, so I found the comment replying with context to be informative.

          • mattlutze 6 years ago

            The user notes it prominently in their profile.

      • Deimorz 6 years ago

        I also probably did thousands of hours of unpaid moderation and development work on Reddit before I worked there.

        None of that's very relevant here though, other than showing that I'm intimately familiar with the dynamic from spending a lot of time on both sides of it.

        • afarrell 6 years ago

          > other than showing that I'm intimately familiar with the dynamic from spending a lot of time on both sides of it.

          Thats a pretty good argument for it to be relevant.

        • jraby3 6 years ago

          Which competitor? Can you link to it please?

          • _ps6d 6 years ago

            It's tildes.net, the best overall description of my goals/values for the site is the announcement post: https://blog.tildes.net/announcing-tildes

            It's not a competitor to Reddit in any meaningful sense though. If anything, my "target user" is almost the complete opposite of what Reddit prioritizes now. Calling it a competitor probably only makes sense if you still think of Reddit as the way it was like... 5-10 years ago.

            It's invite-only to register, but feel free to email me at the address in the blog post and I'll send you one. (That offer's open to anyone else too.)

      • sarakayakomzin 6 years ago

        not really something that applies to this kind of comment.

  • gumby 6 years ago

    They don’t get “nothing”, they get access to a platform and communities which they enjoy.

    Not everybody’s metric is $

  • freepor 6 years ago

    Nothing. If you wanted money why were you moderating Reddit when you knew you weren’t going to get any?

  • smegma2 6 years ago

    Do moderators expect to get paid?

    • jimmaswell 6 years ago

      They get paid in the satisfaction of exerting control over others, enforcing their bias in a community, and generally feeling powerful. That's the kind of person who tends to self-select to delete posts and ban people all day for free. Moderation gets so bad on reddit (visible from subreddits like watchredditdie and nolockedthreads) that many communities would be better off self-policed solely by up/down votes, all tradeoffs like spam and bad posts considered against the tyranny.

      • dageshi 6 years ago

        You can do that now? Create your own subreddit and pretty much enforce those rules, offer that sub as an alternative.

  • xfitm3 6 years ago

    What reddit is today is simple: toxic. That shouldn't be rewarded.

  • k_vi 6 years ago

    Steem has an interesting approach to solve this.

    Steemit[1] is the reddit alternative built on Steem[2].

    [1] https://steemit.com/ [2] https://steem.com/

aasasd 6 years ago

Afaik there are now bots that attempt to transcribe text from images, which is rather apt given the spread of image ‘memes’ and screenshots of text like the greentexts mentioned in the article.

lonelappde 6 years ago

Are these captions appreciated? The bland text seems to not be as entertaining/aesthetic as the images, and captioners never "translate" the image into a witty writeup like a good text joke that captures the essence of the visual.

  • hocuspocus 6 years ago

    Most memes are bland and have no intrinsic humorous value. I see memes as a form of absurd and surreal comedy. Literal captioning seems perfectly appropriate to carry the point.

  • DagAgren 6 years ago

    Close your eyes. Now listen to a discussion among a bunch of people about an image they are looking at.

    Would you appreciate being given a description of the image first, or would you rather just hear them talk about something you have not seen?

  • learnstats2 6 years ago

    The purpose of the captions is perhaps more to inform the reader what the context is, so that they can participate - not to provide alternative content which will be out of context.

DoreenMichele 6 years ago

This is cool.

I co-own a Google group called Blind Dev Works. I had no idea this existed.

aaron695 6 years ago

I thought the earlier post on "Why the Gov.uk Design System team changed the input type for numbers" says a lot in this part-

1. Accessibility 1.a) cannot be dictated or selected when using Dragon Naturally Speaking 1.b) appears as unlabeled in NVDA's element list

We need to stop designing around visually impaired people and hold the tools into account. Why us Gov.uk spending 10's of millions on this rather than fixing the tools?

This makes no sense

"In r/DnDGreentext, one user spends hours transcribing 82,000 characters of text from screenshots of a Dungeons and Dragons roleplay game."

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