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submitted 1 year ago by juxtanother@lemmy.world to c/reddit@lemmy.ml

r/pics, gifs, among others are voting on whether to return to normal operation. As lots of people supporting the black out aren't using Reddit at the moment the voting is currently going in favour of returning to normal

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[-] tauonite@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

The poll has closed:

Voting has now closed.

Our final tally is as follows:

Return to normal operations: -2,329 votes

Only allow images of John Oliver looking sexy: 37,331 votes

The overwhelming majority voted for sexy John Oliver. That's good.

[-] juxtanother@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

Well, I guess it's time to get posting

[-] dhork@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I like this idea, and went back to upvote it. Steve's narrative so far has been to deride the protesting moderators as "not wanting to moderate". This makes it clear that the mods want to moderate, but Steve is taking away the tools they need. Their alternative to opening is even more strict moderation, after all.

Interesting that they made it a upvote poll and not a Reddit poll. Are they throwing a bone to those of us still using third-party apps until they die? Or is it possible the mods have some tools to detect upvote manipulation that they wouldn't have if it were a poll?

Look at what r/science did also. They announced they would open next week, but directly tied their opening with the mod tool Improvement announcement that was recently announced, and indicated that they would close up again if Reddit doesn't deliver on schedule.

[-] thanksbrother@kbin.social 1 points 1 year ago

This has been consensus across most of Reddit. Most people don’t care, and won’t care. So, those of us that do just need to be here making the best of it and not worrying about Reddit. Once there is comparable amounts of content in the Fediverse, people will end up joining for the same reason they joined Reddit.

I initially signed up for Reddit after I kept getting sent links to Reddit. It was just a place that had information I was interested in.

Right now, telling people to join because it will eventually be good and it’s ethically good doesn’t work because there’s not much here and most people are fine using commercial software.

However once there is a wealth of information here, say someone publishes a very good guide for self-hosting and you have a friend that wants to self-host a Plex server, you link them to a lemmy or kbin guide. They will naturally be compelled to join and ask questions if they have them.

It takes time. Just let those of us that are ideologically driven create content good enough that everyone else ends up coming for their own reasons.

this post was submitted on 16 Jun 2023
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