this post was submitted on 23 Jun 2023
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It's obvious that Reddit as a company has no respect for its users and less than that for the mods. It's a thankless, difficult job that isn't even a paid position. I think a lot of us have probably quit real jobs for less bs than Reddit has pulled.

So why stay? Why bother with protests and such when the company has made it clear they don't value your work or your opinions? Why not just pull out en masse and let the place burn to the ground?

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[–] grue 7 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Using a script that edits/deletes a whole bunch of comments in quick succession is detectable and seems more likely to trigger the admins to restore them. In contrast, a slow series of manual edits might be more likely to go unnoticed and make the information stay gone.

[–] nahida 5 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Good point. A script that only archives posts might be a better idea. It could even simultaneously remake those posts here.

[–] justlookingfordragon 1 points 1 year ago

Just copy-pasting everything to lemmy wouldn't be a good idea in my case. Nearly all of my guides have sources linked that redirect back to reddit posts/guides, and I have to change those links to lemmy content or other sites so reddit doesn't get any traffic.

If the majority of content of an user is made without extra links, then a program that automatically nukes everything on reddit and simultaneously uploads it here would be a super convenient thing tho.

[–] justlookingfordragon 1 points 1 year ago

^ exactly this. Every time I manually deledted 2-3 pages worth of comments in quick succession, reddit somehow failed to display any more comments, regardless of which mode I used or how I tried to sort them. I always got the "this user hasn't posted anything" or "there seems to be nothing here" messages.

A couple hours later it always worked again and I could delete more, but it still feels hella fishy. Imagine a bot/program would delete stuff only until reddit pretends there is nothing more to delete and then shuts off, and if the user checks their account immediatly afterwards, it looks as if the content IS gone, only to suddenly reappear a couple of hours later without warning ...

Manually deleting everything took way more time and effort than just running a program once, but at least I'm now positive that my content is truly gone. I even double-checked today to make absolutely sure, and everything google spits out ends in a broken link / missing content. (and it feels strangely satisfying, lol)