Yep. If you search for basically anything, there is likely to be a Reddit post on it. "Is [insert anime/video game] good?" "How do I [insert action]?" "Recipes for [insert food]"
At first, it seems amazing because one account gives you access to all this knowledge and people in what could be dozens of forums that tend to die out over time. Then you see how they try to normalize racism against certain groups, groom children, and try to destroy countries and freedoms.
Reddit was a one-stop shop for some people. We need more subs, and bots.
That's how Reddit took off. Content. Posts. Interactions.
Yep. If you search for basically anything, there is likely to be a Reddit post on it. "Is [insert anime/video game] good?" "How do I [insert action]?" "Recipes for [insert food]"
At first, it seems amazing because one account gives you access to all this knowledge and people in what could be dozens of forums that tend to die out over time. Then you see how they try to normalize racism against certain groups, groom children, and try to destroy countries and freedoms.
Reddit is disgusting traitorous cancer. But its infrastructure is powerful.
We are not cancer. But our infrastructure is weak.
We should copy their infrastructure.