• siv9939@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Their post:

    Greetings, r/PICS!

    The moderators were recently contacted by u/ModCodeofConduct, who had this to say:

    We noticed you recently marked your community NSFW. This action is likely to confuse your community members, as people subscribe to communities based on the content at the time of subscription. This is a violation of the Mod Code of Conduct rule 2.

    While we recognize communities can gradually change as they grow, when your content suddenly changes from generally safe for work to sexually explicit, it harms the community members.
    
    While we can see you haven't taken the step of approving sexually explicit content, we need to separate your community from the communities that abruptly become NSFW and post sexually explicit content, situations in which we immediately take action. Please correct the NSFW marking on your subreddit so that we can separate your community from those violating sitewide rules.
    
    Thank you.
    
    

    As subscribers to r/PICS are aware, the moderators here have worked very hard to ensure that the community adheres to every mandate and message that Reddit has surfaced. Unfortunately, we were unable to state as much to u/ModCodeofConduct, as they disabled the ability for us reply.

    We do not wish Reddit to think that we have ignored their attempt at contact (which would be very rude of us), so we will be offering our response here. We apologize for locking the thread, but as Reddit has yet to answer our previous letter, we are operating under the assumption that it went unseen amongst other comments.

    Thank you (as always) for subscribing to r/PICS!

    • icegreenmelon@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      They continue in a comment underneath:

      /u/ModCodeofConduct,

      Thank you for your recent message.

      We appreciate your concerns regarding r/PICS being marked as NSFW, and we hope that you will be reassured by our response. In short, the shift in question was not a sudden change, nor is there any risk of users being confused… and most important of all, an abrupt reversion would itself constitute a violation of the site-wide rules that you cited.

      On June 16th, 2023, r/PICS (then r/Pics) asked its subscribers to vote on the state of the subreddit, and they overwhelmingly decided to feature only “images of John Oliver looking sexy.” On June 20th, 2023, a second poll was held, and it was determined that “any and all media featuring John Oliver” would be allowed. This also precipitated a change in the subreddit’s name from “/r/Pics” to “/r/PICS,” with the latter being an acronym for “Posts Illuminating Comedian’s Sexiness.”

      As we moderated r/PICS, however, we discovered that large amounts of profanity and offensive content – both of which are listed as NSFW by Reddit’s policies – were present in non-NSFW threads. This was problematic, as users expecting work-safe experiences were very likely to encounter non-work-safe material. Rather than abruptly alter our rules without first consulting the community (which would have confused users), we asked on June 26th, 2023 for subscribers to refrain from offering any NSFW content in non-NSFW threads.

      We also requested a response from Reddit on that same date.

      By July 3rd, 2023, the amount of profanity and offensive content in r/PICS had not declined, and Reddit had not responded to us. It was publicly announced that we had no choice but to mark the subreddit as being NSFW, so as to adhere to Reddit’s own mandates. It was also made clear that our longstanding rules – rules which should have seen r/Pics (in any form) being a NSFW community from the get-go – would be unchanged; that neither gore nor pornography would be allowed, but that tasteful nudity, profanity, and “offensive” content would continue to be acceptable. To reiterate, while we do celebrate a British comedian’s undeniable allure, we do not allow anything sexually explicit to be posted.

      Our surfaced resources – our sidebar, our rules, our wiki, and our announcements – make all of this exceptionally clear, but since Reddit provides no method by which users can be required to read said resources before participating, the visible marking of r/PICS as NSFW is vital to establishing reasonable expectations. Furthermore, as Reddit assures its partners that their advertisements will not run alongside profanity or offensive content, the aforementioned marking is also in said partners’ best interests. That same assurance indicates that moderators “set their own standards for conduct and ‘appropriate’ content,” indicating that r/PICS is solely responsible for determining what is and is not offensive (and policing accordingly). A failure on our part to appropriately list r/PICS as NSFW would therefore run counter to what advertisers have been told.

      We do understand that the shift may have caused some minor issues for Reddit, however, and as we have no desire to harm the platform, we are more than willing to discuss the situation with you. Please respond to our previous request for communication, and we will look forward to exploring productive paths forward. In the meantime, to ensure that r/PICS is adhering to all of Reddit’s guidelines and requests, we would be happy to revert the NSFW setting, restrict posting, and remove any and all content that could be considered “offensive” by anyone. If this compromise does not meet with your approval, please offer a publicly visible comment in response to our open letter. We understand that you are likely very busy, so we will wait until Friday, July 7th before taking any additional steps.

      • abff08f4813c@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        In the meantime, to ensure that r/PICS is adhering to all of Reddit’s guidelines and requests, we would be happy to revert the NSFW setting, restrict posting, and remove any and all content that could be considered “offensive” by anyone.

        Hmm. So they are superficially giving in, they won’t keep NSFW on to avoid ads money for reddit. But by going restricted, and going after all “offensive” content (could I read that to mean all John Oliver content? i.e. all content since the protests started) they stand to cause a massive drop in traffic to the sub, which should still hurt the bottom line.

          • mrbubblesort@kbin.social
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            1 year ago

            This is exactly what they’re gonna do. I’d love to see them implement something like what /r/politicalhumor did and set up automod to react to user comments. So for example, if anyone says “the is offensive” it deletes the post and bans the user

        • BarbecueCowboy@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          Note the statement to remove any and all offensive content. If they’re still going the malicious compliance route, they’re implying they’re going to nuke the sub.

        • Adama@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          E.g. “we’ll go back to being locked which you said we couldn’t do.

          So do you want us to listen to rule A or rule B both of which are in conflict?”

        • Madison_rogue@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          Reddit will replace the mods with those friendly to Admins/Spez and revert back to the way the sub was run prior to the blackout and malicious compliance. This is unfortunately, the only way it’s going to end now.

          • FaceDeer@kbin.social
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            1 year ago

            Replace the mods with who? Reddit doesn’t have an endless supply of compliant free labor they can just assign willy-nilly to whatever subs they desire. Especially now that the masks are off about what Reddit admins really think about moderators.

            • Madison_rogue@kbin.social
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              1 year ago

              I’m giving the most plausible scenario. They don’t need a mod from r/pics to take over; they can use anyone who is power hungry enough to do the job.

              Not saying I like it, or agree with it, just giving the most plausible option for Reddit to take at this point.

              Because, let’s be clear about this, Reddit is winning this battle even if they won’t win the war. This overall event spells the end of the site as we know it…or knew it. The malicious compliance, changing to NSFW, the broad interpretation of the rules…it doesn’t matter. Reddit is going to win this, or appear to win this in the short term, even if it entirely kills their future. They’ll kill a 20 million subscriber subreddit to do it if they need to.

              • FaceDeer@kbin.social
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                1 year ago

                And I’m pointing out how this “most plausible scenario” ends in ruin for Reddit. If Reddit’s most popular subs are being run by people whose literally only qualification for the role is that they are power hungry, what kind of subreddit will those end up being? The mods won’t be doing anything to cultivate the quality of the place, they likely won’t even know what “quality” is. They’ll just come up with a bunch of rules to enforce, throwing their weight around pointlessly and alienating anyone who sticks around long enough to interact with them. They probably won’t even be good “janitor” moderators because proper janitoring is a lot of hard work that doesn’t necessarily result in you receiving the sort of adulation that a power-hungry person would actually crave. Why spend hours dealing with meaningless spam that only bots will see you blocking when you get more of a thrill from bossing around people who slipped up on some technicality or rule that you implemented primarily so that people would slip up on them?

                And if the admins try ordering you to do the spam-patrol grunt work with the threat of kicking you out, well, you don’t actually care. They’re not paying you and you have no interest in the community itself. Rinse and repeat.