• Lvxferre
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    1911 months ago

    Suggestion / request for people leaving Reddit: shred your content before deleting your account. Don’t leave it in the platform, otherwise it’ll just become more profits for the greedy fucks.

    You can mass delete your comments in a safe way through Power Delete.

    • @PeterPoopshit
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      811 months ago

      All I ever do on reddit is shitpost and say absurd bullshit to throw off ai learning as much as possible.

    • @mxmvncnt
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      9 months ago

      deleted by creator

      • Lvxferre
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        411 months ago

        That sounds a lot like a perverse albeit unintentional incentive to keep users relying on a platform that shouldn’t be trusted. Give this a read, as Karl Voit explains it nicer than I can; I’d also like to highlight that any sort of info that you find in Reddit is highly unreliable, due to the excessive local leniency towards certain types of irrationality.

        Also note that this is an easy issue to solve, from both sides. People looking for help can always look for it elsewhere; and people willing to help can migrate their content elsewhere.

        • link
          fedilink
          311 months ago

          I want to agree, but Reddit is an absolute trove of information and support on all kinds of technical issues. It’s a repository of information and solutions not rivaled by many others. Losing Reddit would legitimately make the internet a less usable, less helpful place. It’s a damn shame, but it’s true.

          • Lvxferre
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            11 months ago

            A trove of information plus noise and misinformation. If you ask any actual question - be it tech help or something else - expect most replies to be from:

            • users who didn’t understand your question on first place, no matter how simple and concisely you phrased it.
            • users assuming context out of nowhere or disregarding the context that you’ve provided.
            • users avoiding to reply to your question because they really, really want to boss you around on unrelated matters.
            • users who are not informed on the question, do not know the answer for the question, but assume it and voice it as certainty.
            • users circlejerking or voicing stale jokes based on some trivial detail in your question.

            You might get an actual answer in this sea of misinfo and noise, but if you’re looking for help there’s a good chance that you don’t know enough to sort it out. And the exact same deal applies to anyone looking at the others’ questions looking for help.

            Losing Reddit would legitimately make the internet a less usable, less helpful place. It’s a damn shame, but it’s true.

            The truth is that, no matter what you do, you’re going to lose it. Reddit is already going this way, no matter if you delete or don’t delete your content, and no matter what happens in the alternatives (as this one). Because even misinfo and noise drive engagement up.

        • KelsonV
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          211 months ago

          @lvxferre @mxmvncnt I think post that was one of the things that pushed me to start collecting all of my troubleshooting posts on my website a couple of years ago.

          • Lvxferre
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            111 months ago

            A personal website is a great idea, specially if you have practical knowledge over a few connected topics.

        • @mxmvncnt
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          9 months ago

          deleted by creator

          • Lvxferre
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            111 months ago

            Keep in mind that plenty subreddits have policies against blog posts, even if they aren’t monetised. Even then, you’re setting up another place where people can reach you out for help, so frankly that’s still an amazing idea.

    • Leperhero
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      311 months ago

      Top tier comment! Easily overlooked. Agreed, fuck them!