• Tolstoshev@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    The funny thing is that Spez didn’t even come up with the idea of Reddit. Him and Ohanian showed up with some other dumb idea and Paul Graham was like, that’s stupid, try this idea of mine.

    Then Spez put together some shitty code in Lisp of all languages, which Aaron Schwartz had to rewrite in Python. The site was so unstable that Spez slept with his laptop so he could reboot it in the middle of the night.

    They used sock puppets because nobody was posting enough content. Then they cashed out and fucked off, leaving Aaron to rewrite it, and Erik Martin to actually make a proper community out of it.

    Then Spez comes riding back into town over a decade later to claim credit while he fucks the whole site up by selling out.

    Truly a masterclass in incompetent white male privilege.

    • OrangeCorvus@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      See, I was about to agree with your comment but then you had to go and fuck it up with your last sentence. What does the color of his skin have to do with him being a jerk?

      • dotMonkey@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        Nothing. Don’t see how any other colour skinned person couldn’t have done the same thing.

      • yarr@feddit.nl
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        9 months ago

        Easy, the premise of the post is that he’s a jerk. Since all white males are jerks and he’s white, this is used as supporting evidence.

    • lennybird@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      I miss Aaron Swartz. Spez is so greedy and incompetent.

      Also many of the mods on default subs, not all, are literal teenagers lacking a modicum of reason or maturity I swear. Not the brightest bulbs.

      • kboy101222@sh.itjust.works
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        9 months ago

        On the teenage mod thing, I have a bit of insight-

        So basically modding on Reddit sucks. You feel like you have zero support for a volunteer position and it genuinely becomes taxing. I moderated a large subreddit (4 mill+ subs) for a few years alongside 2 smaller (still 100k+) ones. Both of these were exhausting and I ended up letting auto mod do half the work.

        I got invited by a friend to moderate a default subreddit. I lasted less than a week. The types of things people post on there that the users never see is horrifying and whenever I can afford therapy it will be getting brought up. I’m talking early 2000s gore sites level shit in addition to the buckets of CSAM.

        I started moderating one of the smaller communities back in high school. Let me tell you, my time was worthless back then and I was on top of everything. Once college started, that slowed down a lot and setting up auto mod for the common stuff became entirely necessary. Once I graduated, I suddenly had zero want to moderate. I barely touched anything and automated 99% of my tasks.

        Basically what I’m trying to say is that moderating defaults is damn near a full time job, and most of us adults just don’t want to do it. I know I sure as hell didn’t.

        And let me tell you, some of the mods on there get just an awful break. Almost all of them are just people trying to build communities, many of whom have no idea how, especially once they get big. The real people to watch out for are the mods no one knows the name of. I know for a fact that many power mods were completely unknown. They used dozens of sock puppets to moderate hundreds of communities, all of them aggregated in private discords. I managed to find a wild invite to one once, but I got booted before I could start taking screenshots

      • wizardbeard@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        9 months ago

        Really not meaning to call out anybody, I haven’t encountered this much here on lemmy, but you often find those sort of attitudes with unpaid “jobs” online. Mods everywhere, wiki editors (incredibly territorial and clique-ish), etc.

        There has to be the right mixture of passion, desire for control, and most importantly the free time to put into it. Also have to toss in the strong belief in your own idea of how the space you oversee should be. The free time part often leads to people without much better to do with their time/lives taking up the reins.

        If the team is able to develop tools to reduce the time expenditure, or the userbase is small enough that things don’t tend to get overwhelming (almost all of lemmy), you don’t see it. But yeah, the big reddit subs, especially now with the third party API ban killing the overwhelming amount of available mod tools… it’s a real tempest in a teacup over there.

        Again, most lemmy mods are great, with only a few notable exceptions. Thankfully it’s astoundingly easy to block users and communites on the fediverse, and usually you can find the same community topic on another instance and not miss out on much. Love this place.

        • EndlessNightmare@reddthat.com
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          8 months ago

          and usually you can find the same community topic on another instance and not miss out on much

          One of the worst things about Reddit is that you have some subs that are basically “too big to fail.” You have THE sub for a specific topic. Unless it’s really a niche topic with a small community to begin with, this is not a good thing.

          If the sub has bad mods, you’re out of luck. Or you have a bad knock-off sub that gets like 1% of the traffic.

      • FreeFacts@sopuli.xyz
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        9 months ago

        Take it with a grain of salt, there are lots of pure falsehoods stated there. For example, Spez’s first stint in Reddit lasted two years longer than Swartz was involved (2007 for Swartz, 2009 for Spez).

    • NotSteve_@lemmy.ca
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      9 months ago

      I’ve loved the coverage of reddit from tech news sites. Pretty much all of them sound like the authors are also disgruntled users. It can’t be good for reddit’s stock price (even if it’s up at this moment)

  • Minotaur@lemm.ee
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    9 months ago

    The mod situation on Reddit is weird. There is a very small handful of subs where paying mods makes sense, and then a gigantic swath of them where it really doesn’t.

    He is absurdly, almost comically overpaid though. To the point that I almost consider it’s an intentional choice aligning with going public so they can say “hey! Look at how big we are! Our CEO makes as much as Facebooks!” Or whatever

    • Transporter Room 3@startrek.website
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      9 months ago

      I was a mod for a community that had maybe one post every month. It got engagement every time, but there weren’t many posts. I never had anything unpleasant to deal with. I sure wouldn’t expect pay for that.

      But the big subs with hundreds of thousands or millions of users? That’s a full time job for a team of 30 people basically.

      Every single thread has alerts for a mod to come look at some comment or the post itself. You either ignore it and risk it becoming an issue, or you take care of it.

      They deserve more pay than the guys who sit behind desks snorting coke to make big decisions like “let’s completely rework the look and force everyone to use it by default”

      • warm@kbin.earth
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        9 months ago

        A full time job they volunteer for because being a mod makes them feel special.

        • Transporter Room 3@startrek.website
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          9 months ago

          Some people really just like flexing whatever Tiny Iota of power they can get and mod positions are perfect for them, at least until they mildly disagree with someone who is either in the right or at least just has a differing opinion.

        • EndlessNightmare@reddthat.com
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          8 months ago

          I’m fairly cynical and think that many (perhaps even most) do it for that little shred of power. But some do it out of genuine passion for a project. I’d be more inclined to suspect the former for controversial topics and anything political, and the latter for subs that are related to fun topics and hobbies.

      • Minotaur@lemm.ee
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        9 months ago

        Yeah, I was the sole mod of a “mid sized” community of around 50,000 for several years. It took maybe 10 minutes or less of “work” in an entire week. For the vast majority of communities, even ones with a few hundred thousand subscribers, it simply does not take that much effort to filter out bad posts and handle reports and similar.

        On the flip side, I have personally communicated with a decent deal of mods of major subs like news, politics, twoxchromosomes, etc. and in my experience it’s these subs that tend to get the… stranger dynamics, where a disproportionate amount of the mod team are people who have WFH jobs with essentially no actual workload, they’re stay at home disabled, they’re a NEET in some capacity (or maybe like, going to college but only taking a class or two a semester). Other subs like askscience revolve almost exclusively around discord channels with hundreds of “sub mods” who get together and kind of randomly review content and basically approve it on a lottery system.

        So without being too sympathetic I almost get the CEO from a purely business standpoint. I genuinely cannot figure out a way that you would pay some mods at a rate “equal” to their workload, and how doing so would in any way make the site better and not completely fuck things up where people are now exploiting the payment system for profit without actually contributing to the site.

    • Draupnir@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      His dumbass reply defending himself is that if the company does well then he does well. Essentially stock based CEO compensation. Fucktard addresses it the same way he addressed the API changes, by attempting to divert attention from the egregious amount onto explaining the concept in its simplest form separate from himself.

    • naught@sh.itjust.works
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      9 months ago

      He makes $300k/yr in cash and the rest is stonks. Is he comically overpaid? For a CEO of a gigantic social media corporation that he took to IPO?

      I fuckin hate spez and I think “billionaire” is a concept that should not exist.

      … but what portion of his 300k should volunteer mods get? Should they get stocks? Are they contractors? FTEs? Plenty to be outraged about other than community moderators who volunteer their time for free willingly imo

      • WhatAmLemmy@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        Perhaps they could get a share of the stonk that covers the other 179.7 million of his remuneration?

        • naught@sh.itjust.works
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          9 months ago

          Yeah I agree… but that isnt reddit’s model at all. It would take a massive restructuring and let’s be honest, it would not work.

          Also those are unrealized gains which he can choose to cash out if he doesn’t shit up the stonk price. Can’t put monopoly money in an employee’s pocket and call it a salary (per the mods being paid)

  • folkrav@lemmy.ca
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    9 months ago

    It’s a self fulfilling prophecy at this point. CEOs explaining their pay being so high by “it’s high everywhere, and if you really think about it we’re managing millions of dollars and big important stuff so it’s not like we stole it or anything right”. Their comp gets higher and higher, we’re getting to the point where they’re now making multiple lifetimes worth what their own employees are making, and it’s all supposed to be normal that they do, cause they’re working oh so hard, aren’t they.

    • Drewelite@lemmynsfw.com
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      9 months ago

      I agree. But also the content and quality of their work would likely be better if they were paid. Probably a much better value to Reddit than Spez having a yacht. Or Spez

      • yarr@feddit.nl
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        9 months ago

        Unless the improved quality would result directly in increased profit for Reddit Inc., I don’t see why they would bother paying for a service that people will FIGHT to do for free. If you sacked every single mod on Reddit today, most of them would be replaced within a day by more power-hungry individuals that will mod endless content for a simple ego boost.

      • Minotaur@lemm.ee
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        9 months ago

        I don’t know if I agree. Reddit doesn’t seem to have a huge issue with “bad mods” atm (despite what the community says, the website is more popular than ever). I struggle to think of a way to pay mods that wouldn’t absolutely fuck things or immediately drive it into a system where suddenly all these users are trying to maximize their profits or bribe existing mods to be part of the team in order to get Reddit money.

        For instance, some large subs operate with only a small handful of mods. Others like the askscience sub operates with literally hundreds of sub-mods. Does each subreddit now need a guild accountant to determine who gets what money?

        I don’t like Spez, but I really dont see paying mods as making the site better in any capacity for end users

        • Drewelite@lemmynsfw.com
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          9 months ago

          I hear you and I’d prioritize paying the employees a decent wage and putting money back into the platform. But one avenue of that could be paying mods. Not enough to warrant bribery. But more like a small amount to make it a decent side hustle or for someone to do it part time. But there’s a lot of complications with that, admittedly.