How We're Keeping Reddit Real and Safe in the AI Era(redditinc.com)
redditinc.com
How We're Keeping Reddit Real and Safe in the AI Era
https://redditinc.com/news/how-were-keeping-reddit-real-and-safe-in-the-ai-era
3 comments
I feel like it's gotten marginally better (certainly, relative to a few months ago in the subreddits I frequent), but it's unclear how much of that is Reddit, Inc.-driven vs. per-subreddit-moderator-team-driven.
I think the situation can both be "bad" and "better than it was before," but to your point, some of the recent actions (e.g., curating histories) definitely seem counterproductive.
I think the situation can both be "bad" and "better than it was before," but to your point, some of the recent actions (e.g., curating histories) definitely seem counterproductive.
Reddit is full of Parasite SEO lately.
Meanwhile, real users are shadowbanned all over the place, often just for the crime of being new to the site or not self-censoring. If you use the report function linked at the end of the article, the AI-generated content you're reporting will frequently pass their poorly engineered automated sniff-test, and instead the reporter ends up with their own account flagged for "abuse" or "bullying."