That might be because reddit is almost dead at this point.
My favourite thing about hitting r/canada is to see the disparity between a Beaverton post, or anything else that uses a shilling company and the actual posts in that sub.
Shilling companies are basically call centre-tier work. It isn't where one looks if they want to find competence.
So every post on r/canada will have around 200 upvotes if they're really good, meanwhile every theBeaverton joke will have 8000ish.
It's truly hilarious to see. It's a great example of how un-organic reddit became over the years which is likely why people aren't using it.
Out of those 64 posts on r/Canada how many of them were posted by professionals who were posting as a part of their job? 20? 40? Maybe even 60.
Who even knows at this point? How many upvotes were purchased?
There's many reasons why that site is dying.
It's incredibly obvious at this point.
I'll say this about the r/canada mods though, what do you think the chances are that one of them was doing it as a part of job rather than volunteering their time?
Wasn't that interesting?
The woman who was the heir to a powerful publishing empire, whose father was the one responsible for the state of required University books (with their outrageous prices, constant new editions and minimal payouts for the profs who write the fucking things) and who was indicted for her role in an elite pedophilic blackmail ring was exposed as being a powermod on not just r/politics, but multiple other mainstream, promoted subs?
Conde Nast, eh? Interesting company, that.
That might be because reddit is almost dead at this point.
My favourite thing about hitting r/canada is to see the disparity between a Beaverton post, or anything else that uses a shilling company and the actual posts in that sub.
Shilling companies are basically call centre-tier work. It isn't where one looks if they want to find competence.
So every post on r/canada will have around 200 upvotes if they're really good, meanwhile every theBeaverton joke will have 8000ish.
It's truly hilarious to see. It's a great example of how un-organic reddit became over the years which is likely why people aren't using it.
Out of those 64 posts on r/Canada how many of them were posted by professionals who were posting as a part of their job? 20? 40? Maybe even 60.
Who even knows at this point? How many upvotes were purchased?
There's many reasons why that site is dying.
It's incredibly obvious at this point.
I'll say this about the r/canada mods though, what do you think the chances are that one of them was doing it as a part of job rather than volunteering their time?
Wasn't that interesting?
The woman who was the heir to a powerful publishing empire, whose father was the one responsible for the state of required University books (with their outrageous prices, constant new editions and minimal payouts for the profs who write the fucking things) and who was indicted for her role in an elite pedophilic blackmail ring was exposed as being a powermod on not just r/politics, but multiple other mainstream, promoted subs?
Conde Nast, eh? Interesting company, that.