Reddit done fuckin up: currently banning several major websites

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Oblivion

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Reddit is one of the most popular content, link, and news sharing sites on the internet. Members of the site “upvote” or “downvote” posts, allowing the best content to rise to the top and be seen prominently. That’s the way it is supposed to work, anyway.

Sometimes, though, other websites cheat to make sure their content is featured highly on Reddit. Social media marketing professionals sometimes build up accounts on the site, and then take money from websites to subtly use the accounts to promote content. Others use massive voting rings to unnaturally upvote certain submissions. These cheaters, along with less-subtle spammers, are not welcome within the Reddit community, but they are sometimes hard to catch.

Just over one week ago, the moderators of the Reddit website implemented a rather sweeping change to its policies. Instead of individual accounts associated with spam or cheating being banned, entire domains that are involved with such marketing practices are now being banned. When it was revealed that this had resulted in Business Week, The Atlantic, Phys.org, and other “high-quality” domain links being banned from Reddit, protest editorials popped up on sites such as Forbes and The Daily Dot. Also, Redditors (as Reddit members are called) began to question the policy. Some suggested other websites that they think are worse than those that have been banned, and others questioned whether they could spam links to a website they hate to get it banned.

The response to the uproar has been rather thin from the Reddit moderators, and the details of why the sites were banned has not been revealed. The implication is, though, that most of the sites simply hired social media marketers, and didn’t know or care how the marketers practiced their trade. Reddit moderator hueypriest (who is, in real life, Erik Martin, Reddit’s general manager and an influential person) has stated that the bans are temporary. Feel free to follow all of the drama firsthand over at Reddit.

Keeping Reddit “clean” is a bit of a conundrum. On one hand, websites and authors that wish to promote their own content on the site might actually have something worthy of Reddit’s vaunted front page. Though self-promotion is not forbidden, it does put members on “thin ice.” On the other hand, similar democratized news sharing websites have been destroyed by spam and “power-users” who inevitably sell their services as marketers. Reddit wants to maintain the feel of a small internet forum community while seeing billions of pageviews per month. To do this, some undemocratic decrees will have to handed down from the people who own and operate the website. Warning bans for domains who are involved in sketchy marketing practices on the site are the first of many actions that will be taken to stem the tide of unwanted attention that is now being directed at Reddit.

http://www.webpronews.com/reddit-bans-high-quality-domains-that-game-its-website-2012-06




-BusinessWeek.com
-Phys.org
-ScienceDaily.com
-TheAtlantic.com
-Theatlanticwire.com
-discoveryblog.com

All these sites are apparently banned from Reddit. I'm not sure what the issue is, since these are all legitimate, big name websites, while Reddit still allows crap from the Daily Mail and such. Seems Reddit's become their own worst enemy - they helped stop SOPA for censorship, yet are no doing exactly the type of thing they opposed.

What the hell?
 
Why are they banning these sites? These sites appear to be reliable places for information. Did these sites do anything wrong?
 
Went to in once, was confused, never made it back again. Plus anything that's on there ended up here first, or someone makes a thread about it linking to reddit.
 
I can understand Reddit getting angry about this, because these big name sites were spamming their site to get their articles on the front page. That kind of manipulation doesn't appear to acceptable on Reddit like it is on Google. It's also a shame that they have to resort to blocking these sites, but it is probably a temporary ban to send a message.
 
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theres a new goddamned Reddit thread here every day now lol
 
What Reddit is doing makes sense, especially if the bans are temporary. Did some of you even read the quote in the OP?

GAF does this with places that post unreliable information on the gaming side.
 
Reddit's charm wore off rather quickly. The non-strictly moderated pages or any subreddit conducive to memes are unbearable. r/worldnews, r/space, etc.. still do well as news hubs, though.
 
Why do people feel morally superior and smug in mentioning they nev go to reddit? It's a news aggregation site basically, beutmyou'd think it's a combo of stormfront and a my little brony fan site to hear people try to here people try to be the first to disavow ever having been there.
 
I'm on reddit all the time just as equal with GAF. The websites banned, I could give two fucks and appreciate the mods trying to clean up the place.
 
Go take a look at /r/politics/

The very first article is the same article that Opiate had to lock over here. Ban certain sites but let sites like Think Progress continue unabated? I really wonder what the motivation was on their end.
 
Browsing was always a damn hassle to find worthwhile stuff :/

I assumed I was just getting old.

Also strange list of sites to ban, maybe they badmouthed Reddit lately? EDIT: Seems like a strange statement but makes more sense now.
 
Why do people feel morally superior and smug in mentioning they nev go to reddit? It's a news aggregation site basically, beutmyou'd think it's a combo of stormfront and a my little brony fan site to hear people try to here people try to be the first to disavow ever having been there.

I don't feel superior or smug about it.
 
Didn't this happen days ago? These sites were paying people, probably interns, to post links to their sites. Reddit is hugely popular, so if a link gets popular they can get tens of thousands of clicks. It is a good idea to block the sites that are spamming them.
 
http://www.webpronews.com/reddit-bans-high-quality-domains-that-game-its-website-2012-06




-BusinessWeek.com
-Phys.org
-ScienceDaily.com
-TheAtlantic.com
-Theatlanticwire.com
-discoveryblog.com

All these sites are apparently banned from Reddit. I'm not sure what the issue is, since these are all legitimate, big name websites, while Reddit still allows crap from the Daily Mail and such. Seems Reddit's become their own worst enemy - they helped stop SOPA for censorship, yet are no doing exactly the type of thing they opposed.

What the hell?

did you read your own OP? It says they were banned for hiring spammers to promote content on reddit. Whether their apparently new policy is good or bad, it has nothing to do with the content or legitimacy of the banned sites.

on that note, did anyone in this thread read it?
 
Is it really necessary for people to post "never been to reddit blah blah blah"? What are you guys trying to prove?

Anyways, it's weird for Reddit to ban those sites. They are good sources of news.
 
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