this post was submitted on 14 Jun 2023
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Technology
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The right thing to do would be for the subreddits that went dark to go permanently private on June 30th. The two day protest can be framed as a warning.
If this doesn’t happen there will not be any changes. The Reddit leadership treated the protest as simply something they would need to “get through” before things return to normal.
The modcoord sub that organised the initial blackout are encouraging subs to remain dark in response to this. It seems like a lot of subs are going to remain dark.
If a sub doesn't want to go dark (stopdrinking was given as a community support example), then a touch-grass-tuesday is recommended to close the sub every Tuesday as an ongoing reminder.
Seems like Reddit has taken the protest as "a bit of noise, but business as usual soon". So, time to kick it up a notch
is there a discord where things are being organised?
Opened infinity and went to r/modcoord to find info on how they coordinate with each other but I found nothing
Edit: bruh, I'm blind, I missed this info when checking their subreddit description:
Edit2: I can't send screenshot so there's text version:
Discord - you can request access by sending us a modmail from your own subreddit's modmail (for mods of subreddits participating in the blackout)
That's basically every major corporate strategy this day and age -- wait 6 months everyone will forget. They keep seeing it happen again and again, so of course they're getting bolder and bolder. We the public need to quit being pushovers. Where we spend our time energy and money is a far more valuable vote than the one at the ballot box. We will die from our own conveniences.
I don't know if Lemmy is the solution, but it certainly feels like the right direction to me.
Hell, even if people move back to reddit, I've made the choice to stay on Lemmy, and give a small community everything I've got.
The corporate site that shunned the "consume product" meme subreddit for being too mean to corps...