Follow up question: why won’t YouTube Shorts trust me when I say I don’t want to be recommended channels.
So…many…dancing…trends. And they keep sending more.
Follow up question: why won’t YouTube Shorts trust me when I say I don’t want to be recommended channels.
So…many…dancing…trends. And they keep sending more.
I’m dying with the lack of baseball communication. The biggest Baseball and Atlanta Braves communities are pretty much dead and I really miss talking ball.
I didn’t remove myself as a moderator for the two subs I mod, but I haven’t been on Reddit since Apollo shut down. I use my phone a heck of a lot less these days lol
It’d be a shame if someone provided context to this so it made sense.
Typically, especially in early communities, you just open a public post asking for moderators and come up with some level of criteria for selection. Ask them to submit an “application” through DM or publicly with their previous experience, engagement with the community (for example, if it’s a local community for a town, ask them if they live in the town, how long they have lived there, etc.), and their availability to moderate (1hr a day? Always online? Every couple days?)
In the infancy of a community, it’s more likely you’ll find people who are engaged as hobbyists or passionate about the thing, then as time goes on you run the risk of new applicants being “power hungry”.
Woodworking is a nice hobby if you have the space for it. You can just chill out listening to tunes, drilling and planing, with no real involvement with others.
Not a great tip; as managers, we can see the activity of direct reports, and being in long meetings with no attendees is a dead giveaway.
Yeah I can understand that for likes/dislikes or comments of “this is dumb”, but after hundreds of “do not recommend this channel”, the algorithm should be able to tell a lack of interest in a particular content.