@demvoter @pvellamagi yep precisely. Every one of those subreddits survives on the back of people that are almost weirdly obsessed with keeping it running.
Some of the bigger subs, those mods are performing the equivalent of a full-time job. How they fit that in with earning a living is anyone's guess.
The delicate relationship between the platform itself and the devoted community builders that are building 100% of the site's content, FOR FREE, really needed to be handled with kid gloves.
@demvoter @pvellamagi I simply don't think these power mods are going to want to stay in a relationship with Reddit after this. Hell, even if spez beck-pedaled the damage is done.
They're going to have no choice but to HIRE full-time mods to keep these communities open. Literal employees.
Which then makes every subreddit a corporate product, and mod decisions reflect corporate attitudes.
What they leave up is the responsibility of the company, not "a bunch of volunteers we don't control"