• I’m sure users will step forward if they care.

    This is the part I didn’t quite get. Like I am sure that there were users who requested this sub in r/redditrequest after r/TIHI became unmoderated.

    For some reason I don’t understand, these requests did not pan out and it ended up getting shut down instead.

    At the very least, users stepping forward doesn’t seem to be enough on its own.

    • Admin realized that despite all the applications, there were:

      • People requesting the subreddit so they could continue the protests.
      • People requesting the subreddit so they could give it back to the original mods.
      • People requesting the subreddit so they could own it.
      • People requesting the subreddit because they have strong feelings about “moderation” and want to /worldpolitics it.
      • Absolutely no one who wanted to just do what the old mods did.

      From what I could see, there no actual good-faith requests from people who genuinely cared about /TIHI and wanted to moderate it well and diligently. And like, who’s surprised? It’s a huge subreddit without a concrete community core, it’s more of a content category. I don’t think anyone except the mods cared about the community itself, because there barely was one.

      That’s the same issue they’re running into with the other large subs. They’re too huge and too general and everyone is just another face in the crowd, so there are very few people who care about that specific space in the way that makes for good volunteer moderators - in most cases, when those people existed for those communities, they were already recruited into the old mod team.

      And all the people who want to mod are either activists for the protest, the sort of power-hungry weirdos that end up as powermods, but who showed up to Reddit too late, or somebody with an axe to grind about moderation in general seeing an opportunity in the massive unmoderated subreddit.

    • From the one time I tried requesting a sub there, they don’t just let someone have a sub if they ask and it’d be banned otherwise, they probably won’t give it to you if you don’t have mod experience for example (the reason I didn’t get the niche sub I was trying to revive, which is reasonable enough), or if they feel that what experience you do have isn’t enough that you’d likely be able to handle the particular sub. TIHI is a big sub, so they’d not just be looking for any random volunteer, it’d have to be someone experienced with moderating sizable subs, probably. And those people are, well, exactly the kind of people angry with reddit right now.

      • Reddit gave the snackexchange subreddit to someone who had no mod experience and hadn’t participated in the sub for years. The person claims they didn’t even ask for the position and only asked for the head mod to be removed. Reddit removed the top mod and made the person top mod.

        • That person had effectively no mod experience, but was already on the moderator list there - having been added by the old team.

          Head mod chose to reopen under protest by turning off anti-scam bots and similar - letting sub continue to function visibly the same, but without the bot-supported protection it had used prior. He somehow talked his way onto the team during the protests, and then went to Admin and arranged to oust the head mod who had shut down the bots and was doing protest stuff in the sub.

          He has since been returned to the bottom of the mod hierarchy there, for whatever that’s worth.


          Like, I kind of get that guy’s point in some senses - simply turning off security features that quietly protect users, without announcing it, sure seems like the kind of thing that would hurt users pretty quick - without ever affecting site Admin. Especially when the head mod who shut down those bots wasn’t the user/mod who was responsible for them, it’s not ‘their’ bot if they’re gonna go home and take their toys, as it were.

          Staging a coup and getting Admin to put him at the top of the modlist is hyper shitty, and Admin’s decision to promote someone who wasn’t really part of that community to that sort of position is utterly inexplicable if we were trying to square their actions with their stated values.