this post was submitted on 12 Jun 2023
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Technology
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If people stop providing useful information on reddit, it's usefulness will disappear over time.
There are also lots of people using Shreddit to remove their entire log of comments.
I'm debating whether or not to do that with my account... I have several comments with solutions to specific tech issues, documentation on specific things. At the same time, I feel less and less comfortable with Reddit benefiting from information users provided for free.
Grab those comments and repost them in a place where you are more comfortable. You can keep that knowledge out there without needing to keep your account if you don't want to. Some of those apps actually give you your comment history in a file when they're done.
I've been on the fence about wiping my account as well. It's just hard for me - my history, wholesome interaction with users, friends made, how many people I've helped, I've written a few guides. Man it just sucks. (the largest guide I've written, for Vindictus, is partially outdated, but also I put in sooooooo much effort into it and I'm really proud of it. maybe I'll download and save as a .doc or something)
I think I just need to hear someone's stance on it, hear their points, and be persuaded
I also need to figure out -when- to do that if I end up doing it. I assume before the 30th, but I'm not sure if some have started doing it already, and why
Request your data. Upload the contents wherever you please. https://www.reddit.com/settings/data-request
It's not worth continuing to bring attention to Reddit as a platform when we can export the meaningful stuff and host it elsewhere that actually values the community itself rather than the monetary income that the users could provide.
Honestly? ChatGPT (4) is basically a stackoverflow 2.0. It’s my goto when I want help with specific problems. There are alternative options, is what I mean.
I deleted all my comments on Reddit. I do not want them to benefit from my knowledge even if it might inconvenience someone else
The big problem with chatGTP is that you never can be sure that it's right, you need to check it. On reddit and sites like it, you can see the amount of upvotes, which shows you if they are right or not.
I have seen a lot of highly upvoted comments on reddit which were very, very wrong.
I still use reddit for help on things. But for topics that I'm less knowledgeable about (so I can't gauge the accuracy myself), I try to just take everything with a grain of salt.
True, but the chance of it being wrong is substantially smaller than the chance of chatGTP dreaming up something.
It helps that if something is wrong on Reddit, another redditor usually points it out since there are many eyes on any particular thread.
Yes, I always enjoyed getting down voted for the correct answer.
A lawyer wasnt aware of this and used it to do research on a case. It went poorly.
Jup, legal eagle fan here (:
ONly thE BEsT aND BrIgHtEST PaSs THe BaR!!!
One of my favorite parts about reddit is people will always be there to call out your BS, whether it be via downvotes or a comment. I always appreciated that because more times than not, they will tell them they're wrong and explain why, sometimes even with sources. A lot of the time, they redirect people to better sources of information, like a telegram group about a custom android rom
Of course, this isn't true 100% of the time, not even downvoted comment is wrong - like the other person commented, it's fair to take it with a grain of salt
That's why my solution for this is to research a topic EXTENSIVELY by reading tons of threads and comments about it, put them all together in my head and consider them all, and then decide on the best outcome/answer based on all the research combined. That way, I don't just rely on 1 person's response and hope they're right. For most things though, them being wrong might not even make a huge negative impact
I've found that Redditors also generally have our backs - they warn us about stuff to do or not to do, that companies don't warn us about because it would otherwise profit them
I'm personally planning on wiping my account (I'm waiting for my GDPR export) and getting all the important stuff I wrote on my own "property": on my wiki (or, rarely, on my blog)
(For those interested: https://wiki.thefrenchghosty.me/ - no ads, no trackers)
If you don't have too many maybe consider posting them on Lemmy as new posts before deleting them? Keeps the information discoverable and helps populate Lemmy with good content, while giving Reddit the middle finger - TRIPLE WIN!
We also don't know if search engines will pay the new fees to index reddit, so that could potentially make it disappear faster.
Really? Doesn't google and similar search engines use web crawlers, outside of the devloper API of reddit? Or is that different for reddit?
Currently yes, but I'd imagine they're also going to disallow crawlers via robots.txt or what's to stop OpenAI and friends from acquiring the corpus that way? Though of course that assumes this whole thing is really thought through which might be a big assumption on my part...
I think they will probably whitelist google's and microsoft's webcrawlers, seeing as it's kinda a huge source of traffic for them. But I'm far from an expert in this field XD