this post was submitted on 30 Sep 2024
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It's amazing to me that so many people are willing to work as unpaid moderators so that Reddit's investors can make more money.
There was this one post for a call for mods about "doing a social good for the community".
Like bro, this is a video game subreddit. And you're doing it for free, to help another dude get really rich.
Ideally, it would be because they care for the community they moderate, which I believe is the reason most mods do it.
Then you have creatures like awkwardtheturtle, who knows what motivates them.
I would assume Awkward is motivated by narcissism and/or because they're a power-hungry freakazoid, but who knows? 🤷
I learned if you Google "fertility doctors who used own sperm", there isn't one or two incidents. It's A LOT.
I don't understand why anybody would do such a disgusting thing. but it helps me understand narcissism and power hungry behavior.
it’s power. power motivates and corrupts.
If all mods quit that'd be perfect. Reddit has shown they'll replace mods when they actually need to (or want to). But if no regular users wanted to pick it up then they'd have to pay admins to moderate. I don't think we'll see it though. There's always going to be someone who wants it enough who has enough time for whatever reason.
But, their business model doesn't work unless those mods are working for free. So, while they may replace mods, unless people keep signing up to work for free to help a for-profit company deliver value to its shareholders, eventually it's going to collapse.
Well it used to be (when Reddit was FLOSS and Reddit didn't take communities off the founders who created them, at most they'd close the community) that people saw it as choosing Reddit to host the community instead of creating it somewhere else. However, Reddit has since changed the rules drastically, and essentially taken the communities people created there.
Best response for mods is to move your community somewhere else, and put in an automod rule redirecting people to the new community on Lemmy or whatever. Reddit will probably eventually try to take over and keep competing with your community under the original URL.
I was reading this post recently: https://howtomarketagame.com/2021/11/01/dont-build-your-castle-in-other-peoples-kingdoms/ - I guess it applies to communities equally as much as it applies to anything else.