I’m not sure if it’s a coincidence, but I raised a case with the ICO in the UK, and today they got back to me asking for all my communication with Reddit. Also today - after a month of silence - Reddit also emailed me with this

If you’re in the UK and had been affected by posts being restored, I’d recommend contacting the ICO. It takes less than 5 minutes

  • eleitl@lemmy.ml
    ·
    1 year ago

    I've filed my GDPR request a couple days ago and a shreddit session is due after that. Then another GDPR request to check.

  • Dubious_Fart@lemmy.ml
    ·
    edit-2
    1 year ago

    This is nothing more than reddit pushing their luck with european data laws, and finally relenting and going "OMG if your stuff wasnt deleted it was your fault, not ours, We promise it'll totally work this time if you do it again, since we've turned off our desperation measures after being threatened by fines by the EU"

  • UnverifiedAPK@lemmy.ml
    ·
    1 year ago

    If you’re in the UK and had been affected by posts being restored, I’d recommend contacting the ICO. It takes less than 5 minutes

    Link it or put the email address in your post if you want people to actually do it

  • crowsby@lemmy.ml
    ·
    1 year ago

    The founder of Tildes, Deimos, is a former Reddit backend engineer who believes this is a technical issue rather than a case of Reddit purposefully subverting user intentions:

    Yes, this is almost certainly a technical issue. The way reddit caches things probably isn't the standard way you're thinking of, like a short-term cache that expires and refreshes itself. There are multiple layers of "cached" listings and items for almost everything, and a lot of these caches are actually data that's stored permanently and kept up to date individually.

    There are also multiple other places and ways that comments are cached—comment trees are cached (order and nesting of comments on a comments page, for all the different sorting methods), rendered HTML versions of comments are cached, API data is probably cached, and so on.

    All of these issues are probably just some combination of all of your posts being difficult to find and access due to the listing limits or certain cached representations of posts not being cleared or updated properly.

    • Jacobp100@lemmy.ml
      hexagon
      ·
      1 year ago

      If you added a 5s delay between deletes, they don't come back. Not a caching issue

    • socsa@lemmy.ml
      ·
      1 year ago

      This isn't really a good excuse though. Right to be forgotten doesn't me the right to be forgotten except in a cache loop. Sometimes this stuff is time sensitive.

  • ohto@lemmy.sdf.org
    ·
    1 year ago

    If it isn’t on purpose, then they have a bug that is restoring comments. My main account is 18 years old. Cake Day is December 2005. I deleted it all, and then I checked from multiple devices to ensure when I logged in it was all gone, and it was. Until it wasn’t. I had about 100 random comments from 2013 to 2022 come back. So I manually deleted them all… again. And then a few days later, suddenly different comments are back. I must have repeated this deletion process 4-5 times. Each time, Reddit’s interface (not a third party script or app) showed me everything was gone… until it wasn’t.

    They have some automated recovery going on whether they want to admit it or not.

  • Boz (he/him)@lemmy.one
    ·
    1 year ago

    “Welcome to gaslighting 101! Please take a syllabus from the pile you will [not] find by the door, which will [not] include your instructor’s contact information and office hours.”