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[The Guardian] There is no moral high ground for Reddit as it seeks to capitalise on user data
(www.theguardian.com)
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It's unclear to me to what extent this actually happens, but some people say reddit mods get offers to promote or allow certain posts for thousands a month. It would make sense on subs that have a seriously large audience.
I think what happens more is a "public outreach" company outright buys accounts that mod a lot of communities, then they offer "services".
Like, they'd buy an account that low level mods a bunch of gaming subs, then the same company sells "consulting" to a developer to "improve the conversation". Which would be subjective moderation that favors that developer.
If you're a shady mod, you just don't sell your main, and make lower alt mods then sell them.
Interesting. That would make more sense than paying some loser reddit mod every month. But, if they refuse to sell?