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gtm1260 | 2 years ago

I would also bet that the majority of Reddit users care more about having an open subreddit than the mods do as well.

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devmor|2 years ago

Most of these closed subreddits polled their userbase and only participated in the blackout if users heavily favored doing so.

If by "majority of users" you mean users that do not contribute any content and only view the site, sure, you may be right. But a content aggregator that is devoid of content doesn't exactly make a great website.

bnralt|2 years ago

> Most of these closed subreddits polled their userbase and only participated in the blackout if users heavily favored doing so.

The vast minority polled the users, from what I can see. None of the subs I visited that went dark had a poll. I just decided to check some others - /r/funny and /r/gaming because they're listed as some of the biggest subs that went private, /r/askhistorians because people often use it as "the best of Reddit," /r/outoftheloop because I used to visit it. None of them had polls, either.

People keep trying to push the narrative that this was a democratic decision, but every piece of evidence I can find is that most mods did this without consulting the people that use the subs.

bleepblop|2 years ago

At this point let it burn. A giant wildfire stimulates growth. Sure at the moment it's destructive, but over time new life emerges.

BHSPitMonkey|2 years ago

As our Digg forebearers once taught us. A lesson the current Reddit executives must have forgotten.