Recent comments in /f/technology

Several-Duck6956 t1_je9l7y7 wrote

You think you can get used to seeing a video of your mom’s gaping b hole being filled up by a rando? Like, ever? Or perhaps, your face being glued onto some of the sickest porn shit ever created? Is that something humans get used to? How long does it take?

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moofunk t1_je9knrl wrote

> And the developer did have to write a post request in C to run from the PC. That’s more than I would have done.

He probably could have written it with ChatGPT or at least bring him above the "can I be bothered to do this" threshold.

Have it build an outline and fill in the specifics and make the necessary corrections. It's like having a very junior coder doing the time consuming typing for you, and then you just have to make corrections to make it work.

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8ew8135 t1_je9js9c wrote

It’s disturbing to me when the headline focuses more on the amount of people banned than the methods, it feels like the methods haven’t changed but now they are actually doing by their job better? I dunno. If the rules or methods have changed, lead with that, if you’re just now catching everyone because you decided to, it should have been sooner.

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holliups t1_je9ihc1 wrote

People wanna blame the mods, but overall the issue is the fact that Reddit won't pay the money to hire people to moderate. They rely on whoever is willing to just do it for free in their own spare time, and there are no concrete guidelines on how to do it. You can't be surprised that the moderation is shit, blame Reddit instead.

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holliups t1_je9i0ch wrote

Even if other changes follow that will be a net negative for the content and it's users, it'll still be a 100% worth it since revenge porn will no longer be allowed. No matter what happens next, the entire platform could shut down, and it'd still be worth it in order to get rid of that content. I'm not sure what you're saying here?

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