Ellen Pao's mistake was believing that reddit's commitment to free speech was an actual ideological commitment, not a cost-saving measure.
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En réponse à @sarahjeong
Something
@doingitwrong pointed out to me is that no one's talking about what it means when moderators are paid in powertrips.1 réponse 16 Retweets 47 j'aime -
En réponse à @sarahjeong
Building a multi-million-dollar valuated company on unpaid labor is certainly dubious. There's that angle. It's true of many sites.
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En réponse à @sarahjeong
But Reddit is interesting in that their particular form of unpaid labor is most likely to attract... a certain type.
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En réponse à @sarahjeong
That has a trickledown effect across the entire community. Of course it does, it's apparent for all to see.
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En réponse à @sarahjeong
Is it worse on Reddit than on other forums / BBSes / discussion boards? I don't know.
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En réponse à @sarahjeong
I believe that at some point, questionable moderation practices led to a drain of active users across Reddit. Toxic people became dominant.
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En réponse à @sarahjeong
@sarahjeong I've become resigned to thinking it's inevitable for any similar platform.1 réponse 0 Retweet 0 j'aime -
En réponse à @sarahjeong
@sarahjeong Yes. I wonder if there have been formal studies, or at least PHD research on it. Haven't searched.1 réponse 0 Retweet 0 j'aime
@chort0 was just alerted to this: http://socialmediacollective.org/2015/06/16/reddit-research/ … looking forward to it
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