• db2@lemmy.one
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    1 year ago

    What’s the point of alienating the users who provided and moderated their content for free? What’s the point of making the site unusable for blind users?

    Look at what the qanon crazies were doing just a couple years ago. It’s no different. They don’t care if they’re right, or if the whole place burns to the ground, as long as you’re wrong. They can and have gone to ridiculous lengths towards that end.

    A press release to create a false narrative costs literally nothing, and spez has been trying to do that from day one. The interview he lied about for example. Also, people were meant to believe it was the uppity “landed gentry” behind the alleged hacking. Surely you can see that much.

    • 🇰 🌀 🇱 🇦 🇳 🇦 🇰 ℹ️@yiffit.net
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      1 year ago

      Usually when you do a false flag, you’re pointing blame at a specific group. They never named the group, and it’s not like they are doing the plot of Hackers and blaming every hacker in existence.

      It’s more reasonable to believe this hacker group made it up to try and get publicity or money.

    • Lvxferre@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      What’s the point of alienating the users who provided and moderated their content for free?

      To get rid of what Reddit Inc. perceives as a hostile faction, preventing it from taking full control over the platform, so it can show its investors “WE DID IT REDDIT! WE DEFEATED THEM! The platform is now under our full corporate control, IPO here I come~”.

      I also think that Reddit Inc.'s upper caste didn’t expect things to blow so much out of control.

      What’s the point of making the site unusable for blind users?

      None. Reddit simply doesn’t care about them.

      A press release to create a false narrative costs literally nothing, and spez has been trying to do that from day one. The interview he lied about for example. Also, people were meant to believe it was the uppity “landed gentry” behind the alleged hacking. Surely you can see that much.

      While I don’t think that false-flagging would be “too immoral” for Reddit Inc., it sounds pointless - like, does its upper caste really care if people believe that the landed gentry was trying to hack the site? I don’t think so.


      Let’s use Ockham’s Razor here: it’s simply more probable that the “hacker group” was not Reddit Inc., but someone else bluffing.