6
Reddit moderators need to be stopped | Ashlan's blog
ashlan.comToday, I submitted an article I wrote The world needs more non-profit tech companies to /r/technology on Reddit. You can read the article if you're interested but there's nothing particular controversial with in the article. The article got some conversation going but a little bit later, I was banned from submitting from /r/technology.
I replied to the message about my ban and have yet to get a response. I've read the Reddit Content Policy and don't see anything that I've violated. Are Reddit moderators just banning people at will? Is Reddit not interested in blog posts about technology anymore? This puts a scour taste in my mouth and makes me think twice submitting links to Reddit going forward. Maybe its time to become a lurker again.
I looked up their posts. They likely ran afoul of an anti-spam algorithm. They have an account that was inactive for four years, then it started posting articles only from that blog and almost entirely to /r/technology.
Edit: Their mod team is also relatively small (7 non-bot accounts) relative to the number of users (14 million). For reference, a subreddit I moderate has a quarter million users and 8 mods. That’s 32 times the number of mods on a per user basis. So there is every chance that the modmail message has just not been handled yet.