this post was submitted on 19 Jun 2023
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Yeah true, there's some malicious compliance going on. But in some cases the admins seem to have also told mods they have to "operate normally", i.e. telling them not only do they have to open up, but that they have to moderate in a certain way.
Ouch. Totally believable, unfortunately. But then again, who defines normal?
Would be interested to hear more specifics, as this is the first I've heard about "normal"
An r/Steam mod saying they were told they had to return to "normalcy": https://www.reddit.com/r/Steam/comments/14bvwe1/comment/johskj2/?utm_source=reddit&utm_medium=web2x&context=3
I guess that could just mean "open up". But I suspect Reddit is just focussed on forcing subs to come out of private for now. Once they've done that, they'll force them to start moderating "in good faith" or whatever phrase they want to use to make mods behave in a certain way.
r/Steam is cracking me up with their malicious compliance. Their front page right now is filled with posts about actual steam.
Is steams mod team part of the corporate hierarchy as many brand subreddits are?
If so, we might not be getting the full picture because I can't imagine they are behaving this way with companies who are otherwise considered brand partners.
Not as far as I know... but don't know for sure.
Outrageous what reddit admins are doing, but not unexpected.