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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 21st, 2023

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  • Reddit does not really have a reputation of fair-play. As you have deleted your account without deleting your data you might find it restored with a dummy handle “for consistency”.

    My advice to anyone: if you want to take your data back from reddit you should first edit your posts (to some “lorem ipsum suck fpez” gibberish) then delete them using tools like power delete suite or shreddit.

    Then you should keep your account alive and regularly pay reddit a visit just to see if its content hasn’t been restored. If you’re in a country under GDPR regulation you can also ask for a GDPR archive of your data that should cover whatever they have on you including posts and comment. This is a good way of verifying what you deleted was actually deleted and not just “marked as” and yet available.

    I have left reddit. As in, I do not engage further than discussing migration issues. But I keep an eye on my account and will do so until I’m sure it’s been thoroughly cleaned up. Account deletion is not yet in order, it might be before they go public because I also want them to fall hard from that.




  • I’m not sure this data’s worth a lot though, as many users (likely most of them) are using anon or throwaway accounts with none to little link to the rest of their activity. Sure it can be processed for statistics but I don’t think there’s a lot to extract further. Reddit is no facebook where the average joe has its “average joe” account, and I don’t think signing up with a google/apple/whatever account is the most common practice on reddit (or at least with your real, non-portmanteau anon account).

    As for archived posts and comments they’re already publicly available on archive sites. Why would anyone buy them?



  • But what Reddit is putting a price on is access to content generated by its users, not Reddit itself.

    Spot on. Spez is short-sighted thinking he can “musk out” of this situation, as reddit is no twitter.

    Twitter’s value is on its users: often empty but famous shells moving hot air from tweet to tweet. Reddit’s value was in the content we brought but as soon as we stop feeding the beast it’s just a glorified wayback machine. That is, if we do not delete our past contributions.










  • Call me stubborn if you must but as long as beehaw is playing the maverick part and not willing to be a full and compliant part of the fediverse I just won’t raise an eyebrow. Well, not right now at least.

    It’s not that I’m super-informed and henceforth condemning beehaw or whatever, I just feel like transitioning from bigbroreddit to the fediverse is enough change without betting on the outsider that’s whistling their own tune already.

    If someone can educate me bringing some food for thought about beehaw I am willing to listen and eventually learn.



  • Spez just got muskified.
    He was thinking (or more likely, his hubris was babbling): “If Elon can do it, I can do it!” without realizing that reddit is the exact opposite of twitter.

    Meanwwhile in the real world, twitter’s value is all about its users (as in, empty but famous shells making some noise) while reddit’s value is in the content its users bring. On reddit the influence isn’t the person but what they bring along, and if they stop bringing it along then reddit’s just a second-hand internet time machine.

    Not even talking about users who (like me) have deleted their “lifetime” contribution while keeping their account alive (in order not to find it restored with a dummy handle). Reddit is getting the Thanos treatment, bit by bit.




  • There’s something I find quite concerning: on a recent poll on r/redditalternatives the “best” alternative by a large amount is squabbles.io, then beehaw, fediverse “regular” instances (kbin, lemmy) only coming in 3rd and 4th position.

    If that poll really reflects the opinion of the average reddit Joe (I tend to take external polls with a grain of salt as they can easily be brigaded), not only people are voting en masse for a centralized solution - again, but also they’re favoring the maverick fediverse instance over proper ones.

    Even more concerning, this snippet taken from squabbles.io’s privacy policy:

    Disclosure of Information
    We may share your personal information in the following circumstances:

    With your consent or as otherwise necessary to provide our services
    With trusted third-party service providers who assist us in operating our website and services
    When required by law, or in response to a valid legal request
    In connection with a merger, acquisition, or sale of assets, in which case your information may be transferred to the acquiring entity

    To put it bluntly: brace yourselves, we will sell your data (and likely the company) as soon as we get enough dough from it.