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Ask HN: Why are subreddits so toxic?

11 pointsby hn_reddit_humanabout 6 years ago
Has reddit always been so toxic? Should subreddit moderators have stricter codes of conduct, especially those that are more &quot;industry&#x2F;tech&#x2F;profession&quot; oriented? I&#x27;m from the &quot;tech&quot; industry, and I was surprised to see that tech subreddits are also fairly _arbitrarily_ toxic instead of the negging-but-constructive type comments that pass on HN.<p>Or is that entire idea just against reddit? HN is a more moderator based forum, for example.<p>What are your thoughts on community censorship? When do things cross a line? Or should it just be a subreddit owner&#x2F;moderator based thing and let everyone just figure it out...

1 comment

accrualabout 6 years ago
I think popular subreddits tend to support more toxic behavior, especially those easily accessible by keyword and more so the defaults. They invite anyone and everyone to post. &quot;Niche&quot; subreddits tend to be smaller groups and seem more self-moderated. Sometimes you can find these in the sidebar of the subreddits you&#x27;re interested in.<p>Reddit definitely didn&#x27;t start this way. In many ways it was similar to HN in that it was a small group of technical users, but it grew into a public forum for all topics. The demise of Digg was another factor but is arguably small considering Reddit&#x27;s popularity today.<p>Reddit is an immensely useful resource if you know what you&#x27;re looking for.