Comment by SpaceSteak on 07/09/2014 at 14:06 UTC

6 upvotes, 1 direct replies (showing 1)

View submission: Time to talk

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Complete forthright transparency, eh? Slow down! Can you imagine a completely opened government... where corruption can't happen as much, because checks and balances are easily verifiable and enforceable? Seems like that would definitely hurt some people. ಠ_ಠ

One day, there may be some sort of light-speed, region-less communication system that links all of humanity together, in order to get closer to that dream.

Although it is fun to joke about, I think the disappointment felt in the /r/blog and /r/announcements comments stem from people thinking reddit brought us closer to this world, but this makes us face an imperfect reality. Reddit as a platform definitely brings us closer to this world, it's just not a complete reality yet, and there's definitely tons of room for improvement.

Also, we can't forget that reddit is a privately owned corporation, so it's playing the same game that we're ultimately tired of. It might play it differently, with cute aliens and non-celeb boobies, but it is bound by the same rules that have corrupted so many other corporations into soulless entities that seek nothing but to keep on existing and growing.

However, reddit management does seem to have good intentions. My personal opinion is that Yishan's heart is generally in the right place, but the world is imperfect so they make mistakes. This whole thing is a giant mess, and if I was in his shoes, I wouldn't know how to deal with it either. The fact is that managing communities with millions of active members is not easy.

There is not always a good answer, so sometimes the best answer you can come up with is terrible. The leadership issue, IMO, was not acting swiftly one way or the other. Waiting out a week, getting the 250,000,000 views on TFP (according to the IamA from the head mod) and *then* deciding it was too much of a headache to deal with? Well, I guess sometimes people mess up by just not deciding fast enough. This is one of those times.

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Comment by altxatu at 07/09/2014 at 15:11 UTC

8 upvotes, 1 direct replies

If Yishan's heart is in the right place then why is /r/photoplunder still a thing? Aside from celebrity status, it has the exact same type of content. Stolen nudes. This[1] is the top rated post.

1: http://imgur.com/a/TiH9q

You can't admonish your left hand for stealing when your right hand is in someone's pocket digging for cash.

Why can't they just say, we're taking this down because of legal reasons, and leave it at that? It doesn't need to be a soapbox to proclaim how morally superior the admins are compared to the user base. It's hypocritical, and disingenuous at absolute best. But then again, every man is responsible for his own soul. Right?