this post was submitted on 10 May 2024
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Interesting. I've ban evaded a few times too, honestly. I got permanently banned from a sub about a video game for asking about sales, and eventually again on my next 2 accounts (basic variations of the same name, although I didn't create them with the sole intent of ban evasion). I left when Reddit pulled their shit though, so none of my accounts were ever flagged
Honestly from a mod perspective though, I do understand it. We had one really determined troll on a relatively small sub (70k members) I modded who made dozens of accounts a day for about 6 months and it sucked. Reddit nuked their accounts for ban evasion after a manual report, but they take anywhere between 12-48 hours to reply, by which time old mate troll face has already cycled through another 15 accounts. I think my issue with bans is "permanent" bans. It just seems excessive to ban people for the rest of eternity over one or 2 comments with no avenue of appeal. I'll admit that I'm guilty of this too, I have and will continue to permanently ban people in the future, but if somebody actually comes back and apologises (for some reason extremely rare), I am usually willing to at least hear them out
r/Australia is pretty well known as the place to go to if you want to be in a community where the mods are somehow bigger dicks than the users. r/Melbourne wasn't that far behind them either imo (present company and the Melb DT excepted, of course)
Look it is what it is. With the API changes and IPO, I feel reddit has been circling the drain. Mods needing to use these bots is a sign of the end times. The new account created isn't allowed to post anywhere due to age and karma, which'll put genuine new users off IMO.