Twitter has launched a new feature, called "Birdwatch," that relies on users of the social media platform to identify content that they deem misleading and post notes to provide "informative context" on the topic.
What do you mean unpleasant? I love answering the same three questions repeatedly for six years as I generate plenty of value for reddit without seeing a cent of it. Dealing with deeply fucked up people in ways that endanger me but not reddit which offers zero protection is great. A+++ definitely don't just ignore the mod queue because it's just going to flash again in two minutes when someone else doesn't understand that a snack exchange involves exchanging snacks. I've never even felt the urge to draw a colouring book to explain to someone that you just put snacks in a goddamn box and take it to the goddamn box place and wait for a goddamn box in return.
Yeah but what if we crowd source it and destroy even more paying jobs in the process? Disruption, baby!
It just sounds like reddit mods with way less power and probably more accountability than reddit mods.
So you're saying that on top of everything else, they also found a way to make moderating even less pleasant. Amazing!
What do you mean unpleasant? I love answering the same three questions repeatedly for six years as I generate plenty of value for reddit without seeing a cent of it. Dealing with deeply fucked up people in ways that endanger me but not reddit which offers zero protection is great. A+++ definitely don't just ignore the mod queue because it's just going to flash again in two minutes when someone else doesn't understand that a snack exchange involves exchanging snacks. I've never even felt the urge to draw a colouring book to explain to someone that you just put snacks in a goddamn box and take it to the goddamn box place and wait for a goddamn box in return.