Message from @da britian
Discord ID: 482215763684622347
&...?
You have left out a massive final component of what reddit is.
you mean WAS
I think they have forgotten the web rating component of the site...
Sorry, could you explain how that contradicts my point?
How does website dedicated to user created, moderated, rated content undermine itself by people voting on the stuff?
Voting is one of the key aspects to the site.
Because the voting hides content, and promotes content only along very narrow lines
Reddit has as many hugboxes as it does by virtue of its design
Is there currently a discussion going on?
Yes
Alrightie, you guys have fun~
Okay, there are subreddits that are hug boxes by a culmination of factors, one of which can be caused by voting. I have seen subreddits that are safe spaces because of the mods they have & the mods are accountable to nobody but the admins. Are there places like some discord servers bad because they have moderation & the mods are jerks? Yes, but that is a product of the people who are mods, not the concept of moderation. I have seen subreddits in civil wars within communities because there are lots of different people with lots of different opinions, with mods who to tolerate both sides & both sides being big enough to have both their views represented in up votes.
That's the thing. It takes no work for a conversation in discord to go smoothly. It is exceptional when reddit isn't a self affirming circlejerk
I'm not even talking about moderation. I'm talking about design and user behavior
And how the two interact
You're the one going off about corgis and mods and shit when none of it changes the fact that the voting system is bad, and has to he overcome for any kind of conversation to be viable
And this is an issue other sites solved *ages* ago, by not having a shitty system implemented on a base level
You are overlooking the most obvious part of voting & that is demographics, the more chilled out communities don't care if you have a contrarian opinion, they will even upvote it if is well stated, there are communities who are interested in welcoming new people to join it rather than just isolating themselves to just the hard core elements.
Even a garbage place like /r/CringeAnarchy, which is a place that that have a bunch of lax mods who do the bare minimum to moderate, a place that should according to what you propose should be a hugbox for "alt-right" opinions, just cant do it. As circle jerky as it can get, it simple cant achieve the peak, new people keep on coming in, disagreeing with content, & getting upvotes. People posting cats instead of cringe, people are confused if they people are up voting stuff to cringe with or cringe at or just question if it is cringe at all & asking question of what the is going on. People keep on calling out satire posts instead of falling in line, people keep on switching to mock right wing cringe & /r/CringeAnarchy itself.
The places that do turn into hug boxes are not the ones that vote in circle cerks that can be hostile to contrary opinions & content, it is the subs who have mods that ban people with contrary opinions & content that turns into safe spaces.
>the foundational feature of the site doesn't matter if users choose to not abuse it
I've already addressed this. A shit law isn't not a shit law if enforcement is poor. If you're going youre going to start talking about post/community quality though, you're not really going to win me over there either
But it does matter that it exists & does get used without sedition, why would you assume that people could only use it to be a jerk?
Yes, a bad rule does matter even while it's not being used
And it's not about intent
All you have to do is press a button to show displeasure, and if enough people do this the comment will be hidden
& if there is more than enough people people who disagree with the downvotes, then they can equally as easily upvote it.
Which wouldn't be an issue if the function *wasn't there*
The *key component to the website*
It's democracy
And the problem of mob rule
Why the US is a republic
I am acknowledging the fact that one aspect of the core functionally of the site can be used & abused in certain situations, but there is more general upsides to the voting system for for a site made on voting on. If you don't like a democratic system of organizing by the appeal of masses who use it, & would rather have a linear feed of content where the newest content is the most important content, then you can sort by new (& if you are in a thread by old instead if you please), or go to another one of the hundreds if not thousands of forums on the internet that does that. Also downvotes remove stuff, if you truly are are interested in the opinions that drew the most aiur, then you can scroll to the bottom.
Which is why nobody lives in an actual democracy
You're moving the goalposts
What is the goal post I moved?
The discussion was about how Reddit is a "mistake", not about which sites I should use
It's actually worse than, say, a democratic system with rights, because your ability to have your voice heard is determined by other people's subjective like or dislike of it, and not even a majority
Which is precisely why brigading is a problem
Sorry, I meant to use the word someone instead of you, this was a poor use of word for target subject.
Even then, site preference doesn't discuss the core claim
Look, reddit gives a poster the "right" when the don't break the rules to state their thoughts, a poster just does not have the entitlement to receive equal attention as all other posters by all audiences regardless. If someone goes to the town square, they might have the place to express their opinion, but the audiences can ignore them because the speaker's opinion is uninteresting, the audiences can stick out their tongue at the speaker, the audiences can call the speaker's opinion garbage to encourage them to shut up, the audiences can recommend people ignore the speaker, the audiences can pay attention & praise another speaker over first speaker who is siting alone, the audiences can protest so loudly that they drown out the speaker with their own speech, but despite the control the audience has react to the speaker, they can not remove the speaker.
Heckler's veto isn't legit, which is what reddit's voting system ultimately boils down to