I append "reddit" to any query not meant for a productive task. Except now the internet is mostly reddit for me, which kinda bums me out. Especially given the new js-heavy design. In 2019, if I want reliable search about something I know nothing about I must first search on google, then try again with "reddit" appended, then change www.reddit.com to old.reddit.com, then parse through what are often questionable answers from anon users, possibly still influenced by marketers, and then maybe, I get the answer or next lead that I was looking for.
whalabi|6 years ago
Most of the times I Google something I get content farm rubbish.
Know also that low paid "freelance writers" are often writing a lot of this information that so many people rely on.
I use reddit queries for things that aren't really critical, say a video game recommendation (try Googling that and see how many "top 17 adventure games" you get)
For more serious things like "do I have lactose intolerance?", I google something like [wiki lactose intolerance]
I do wonder why one of the world's most advanced intelligent systems built by thousands of the world's most intelligent people employed by a company which pretty much explodes in a burst of millions of dollar bills when you tap it lightly can't seem to show us results that aren't full of rubbish.
It's like Google's "discover" feed - it shows me trash news from a tabloid.
Google knows _A LOT_ about me, don't they know I despise tabloid news? Gossip about Kylie's breast cancer? No.
calcifer|6 years ago
You can opt-out of the redesign in your settings so www.reddit.com and old.reddit.com both show the old reddit, and you can use new.reddit.com to view new-only pages.
lostctown|6 years ago
whamlastxmas|6 years ago
thirdsun|6 years ago
LeoPanthera|6 years ago
carlob|6 years ago
c0vfefe|6 years ago
JMTQp8lwXL|6 years ago
c0vfefe|6 years ago
I mean, that's Reddit though? No one's making you look there first, it's not "The Internet's" fault that forums are unreliable.
nunez|6 years ago
angel_j|6 years ago
thirdsun|6 years ago
mythrwy|6 years ago
It's a cesspool of kiddie memes, shock, ill informed opinion and political posturing.
Besides, if I wanted to search Reddit I'd go to Reddit. It being front page for _everything_ I search for now is so annoying.
rchaud|6 years ago
But it is maybe the only major site online where you can at least get a real person's opinion on common questions, like recipes and cooking methods, without the fluff of the productized, Adsense-driven sites that exist only to make money.
Case in point: r/gifrecipes. Recipes shown in gif form, so 60 seconds or less. Discussion can happen in the comments, but there won't be any inane babble about how the recipe has been passed down their family for generations. The lengthy pre-ambles on recipe blogs exist only to circumvent Google's penalties for "thin content", i.e. pages with less than 500 words.
Content is being written to serve Google's requirements, not the users.
MisterTea|6 years ago
I tried helping in some subs but was met with hostility. Tried directing someone to the proper channels (mailing lists) to search for help with a openbsd hardware issue and I get insulted in return because they didn't like my answer. And it wasn't a rude "RTFM" reply but an honest helpful post explaining the mailing lists and how to search and ask. Fuck that noise. I got better shit to do.
The real purpose of reddit is to aggregate people around faux community to sell ads. You have nothing but circle jerks and fanboyism but no actual meat and potatoes. Even after deleting every single worthless default main sub the subs I try to watch are all "look what I did!". Actual questions are never answered. It's all about showcasing to get circle jerks going so people can live vicariously through the achievements of others. That keeps the eyeballs on the ads.
I find myself going back to IRC where the barrier of entry is much higher so you wind up with people who know a thing or two.
SahAssar|6 years ago
ajmurmann|6 years ago
You could make the same generalization about the internet as a whole. Reddit has so many communities and there is a lot of variety. r/fountainpens for example has none of the ills you describe.
SerLava|6 years ago
Reddit is simply the largest site that disincentivises content-for-contents sake. When you find someone asking a complex question, the person answering it does it because they have a real answer- not because they can make some money by googling the answer and rewording it. That's what the rest of Google's content often devolves to. For certain topics.
Zenbit_UX|6 years ago
erikpukinskis|6 years ago
SomeOldThrow|6 years ago
fortran77|6 years ago
voxl|6 years ago
Really it's worse off for not having the occasional meme.
kevin_thibedeau|6 years ago
mrhappyunhappy|6 years ago