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[The Guardian] There is no moral high ground for Reddit as it seeks to capitalise on user data
(www.theguardian.com)
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It's unclear to me to what extent this actually happens, but some people say reddit mods get offers to promote or allow certain posts for thousands a month. It would make sense on subs that have a seriously large audience.
I think what happens more is a "public outreach" company outright buys accounts that mod a lot of communities, then they offer "services".
Like, they'd buy an account that low level mods a bunch of gaming subs, then the same company sells "consulting" to a developer to "improve the conversation". Which would be subjective moderation that favors that developer.
If you're a shady mod, you just don't sell your main, and make lower alt mods then sell them.
Interesting. That would make more sense than paying some loser reddit mod every month.