• dan@lemm.ee
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    2 years ago

    Yes there’s an element of people not wanting to lose their power. But for every dickhead powermod there are dozens of small subreddits with a handful of people working hard to establish and maintain a community, largely altruistically and thanklessly.

    Modding, when it’s done well by dedicated people with a passion for their subject, can be incredibly powerful. There are some communities (eg legaladvice, askhistorians) that are unique and just couldn’t exist without those people dedicating untold hours to tending to them to prevent them from descending into chaos. Not to mention the custom tools almost all of them rely on.

    Have a read of Legaladviceuk announcement.

    • GreatWhiteBuffalo41@slrpnk.net
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      2 years ago

      Yeah the issue with my sub is we’ve worked really hard to create the community we have. A lot of our users won’t leave. I’ve decided to use an automod sticky comment on every post letting everyone know where the rest of our official pages are. I have seen very little migration unfortunately.

      We decided as a mod team to keep our sub open. We’re all migrating off Reddit but we’re keeping our accounts for our one singular sub.

      • stevecrox@kbin.social
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        2 years ago

        Most people don’t pay attention to things around them and don’t tend to care unless it directly impacts them.

        As long as you and other mods are carrying on in your roles, these people have no motivation to move.

        If the subbreddits stop being moderated it will generally degrade the experience, people will become impacted and then be forced to take notice.

        This is the gamble, someone might step up, they might decide leaving reddit is too high a price or you might cause people to migrate.