3 points

Well that’s kinda ridiculous

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4 points

Ridiculous enough to warrant engagement though, isn’t it?

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-12 points

I couldn’t even continue reading pasted the first comment. Ridiculous

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3 points
Deleted by creator
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11 points

Good luck to them. I dislike Reddit as much as the next guy, but this whole thing doesn’t stand a chance. You do volunteer work nobody even asked you to do and then demand money? How does that make any sense at all?

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6 points

They are probably not gonna get backpay, but what this could achieve is to force reddit’s hand in legally recognizing mod’s work from that point on and giving the mods more standing than they have now.
At the very worst, it sends a message and helps to continue bringing to light reddit’s shitty practices.

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7 points

About as much sense as building a company off free volunteer labor and then acting like you own those volunteers and the money they helped you earn

It doesn’t take a ton of effort to make a website and an app, Lemmy is already hockey-sticking off entirely volunteer everything.

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3 points

Won’t work. It’s a volunteer, unpaid position. They have no legs to stand on in this case. The only real course of action they have is just not giving Reddit their service at all. Stop going there, stop giving them clicks and traffic.

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9 points

the moment reddit starting threatening to fire them and take over THEIR communities, ut became a job.

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-1 points

Eh I see what you mean but technically reddit has always been up front about it being volunteer, and they did give them the choice to step down instead of reopening. So I can’t see it being held up in court

But I’m NAL

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10 points

I replied to this type of comment in another thread. Reddit is governed by California law. There may be something here, since reddit was benefiting off of free labor. Volunteering might not actually matter, since moderators were putting in actual hours for the benefit of reddit, while not receiving anything back. Without mods, reddit wouldn’t have the power to moderate all the subs, thus, reddit relied on mods to do unpaid company work which would have cost reddit millions per year if they were to pay moderators. I think there’s a thin case here.

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3 points

The real power would be in the union anyway. If they could gather the majority of mods and they actually went through with a strike, it would be a huge test for Reddit. They would have to bring in a ton of scabs or cave to the mods. Scabs may work in the king run, but it would also destroy every community they did it to.

So the real question is whether these mods will actually act as a union or will it’s members buckle in fear of being replaced.

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3 points

I would guess that, since their livelihoods aren’t on the line, mods would be far less likely to buckle than typical workers - if they can get organized in the first place.

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1 point

Not sure we need a formal union, just an absence of powerhungry idiots who are more than happy to replace the mods with integrity that Reddit removes. If no ones willing to step up they really can’t remove mods in a meaningful way.

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0 points
Deleted by creator
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1 point

TBH, I think Spez did most of that himself. Reddit users just don’t like what he said and how he said it. Too much disrespect and too many blatant lies. Why would I want to hang around a community like that?

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