Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin

They're not "limiting free speech" in any way or form. They're moderating what gets published on their platform. That's a totally different thing. You got anything to say? Print out a pamphlet or host a blog on your own server. Nobody's stopping you.

As to ambiguous decision making -- you're right about that, but they have a problem. Reddit has a largeish group of teenagers, unemployed white men living in their mother's basement and techno-libertarians, that have turned the site into a cesspool of xenophobia, misogyny, wingnut conspiracies and most of all -- lots of eighth grade drama . Those people, of course, don't matter (advertisers don't care much about them), and nobody in the real-world (not most Reddit users) care or even notice the imaginary armageddon taking place in those kids' heads, but the problem with them is that 1) they're unreasonable, and 2) they have the time to make the lives of the site administrators miserable (it would make their day -- they've got nothing more exciting to do).

So the people running Reddit are scared. They've invited the devil -- worse, teenagers -- into their home for an endless party, and they know they'll trash the place even more if the party were to end. So they're sending mixed messages. They're talking about respect, but they allow CoonTown and "men"'s rights groups. It's time for Reddit to grow some balls, kick the misbehaving kids out, shutdown not a few, but all hate subreddits, all without issuing as much as a press release. The kids will talk about their judgement day (that nobody in the world would notice) for years, the grown men in their mom's basement will feel like they're actually being hunted, and everybody would get exactly what they want.



Are there really a lot of teenagers on there? When I was in high school almost nobody knew about Reddit, it took until college for most of my peers to find out what it was.




Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: