Comment by Durinthal on 02/08/2022 at 18:25 UTC

30 upvotes, 1 direct replies (showing 1)

View submission: Better Faster Stronger: Recent improvements to moderation tools.

Given that desire, we were beyond excited when we launched Mod Notes across all of our native platforms earlier this year.

Except the one that moderators use the most, of course. I get that you want to cover a lot of the functionality that third-party tools provide but a lot of us are *still* going to use them because you're trying to force people off the version of the site that we prefer for using Reddit at all.

Replies

Comment by Bardfinn at 02/08/2022 at 18:57 UTC

20 upvotes, 2 direct replies

Counterpoint:

For most moderators in most communities, removing a few comments a day, spam-binning a few posts a day, and handling a few modmails a day, per moderator, is the extent of their mod footprint. They’re not the few technically-inclined “I banned 250 users in a calendar month and uncovered a spam ring and escalate to modsupport every day” large-subreddit specialist / generalist mods.

For people running small and/or private communities, modding from mobile is now fast and convenient.