Type | Private |
---|---|
Founded | June 23, 2005[1] |
Headquarters | San Francisco, California, U.S. |
Area served | Worldwide |
Founder(s) |
Steve Huffman Alexis Ohanian |
Key people | Steve Huffman (CEO) |
Employees | 71[2] |
Slogan(s) | "The front page of the internet" |
Website |
www |
Written in | Python[3] |
Alexa rank | 32 (January 2016)[4] |
Type of site | Social news |
Advertising | Banner ads, promoted links |
Registration | Optional (required to submit, comment, or vote) |
Available in | Multilingual, primarily English |
Current status | Active |
Reddit (/ˈrɛdɪt/)[5] is an entertainment, social news networking service, and news website where registered community members can submit content, such as text posts or direct links, making it essentially an online bulletin board system. Registered users can then vote submissions up or down to organize the posts and determine their position on the site's pages. Content entries are organized by areas of interest called "subreddits". The subreddit topics include news, gaming, movies, music, books, fitness, food, and photosharing, among many others. As of 2015, the website had 542 million monthly visitors (234 million unique users), ranking 14th most visited web-site in US and 36th in the world.[6] Across 2015, Reddit saw 82.54 billion pageviews, 73.15 million submissions, 725.85 million comments, and 6.89 billion upvotes from its users.[7]
Reddit was founded by University of Virginia roommates Steve Huffman and Alexis Ohanian in 2005. Condé Nast Publications acquired the site in October 2006. Reddit became a direct subsidiary of Condé Nast's parent company, Advance Publications, in September 2011. As of August 2012, Reddit operates as an independent entity, although Advance is still its largest shareholder.[8] Reddit is based in San Francisco, California. In October 2014 Reddit raised $50 million in a funding round led by Sam Altman and including investors Marc Andreessen, Peter Thiel, Ron Conway, Snoop Dogg and Jared Leto.[9] Their investment saw the company valued at $500 million.[10][11]
Overview
Site
The site is a collection of entries submitted by its registered users, essentially a bulletin board system. The name "Reddit" is a play-on-words with the phrase "read it", i.e., "I read it on Reddit."[12] The site's content is divided into numerous categories, and 50 such categories, or "default subreddits", are visible on the front page to new users and those who browse the site without logging in to an account. As of May 2014, these include:[13][14]
Category | Subreddits |
---|---|
Educational | News, Science, Space, TodayILearned and WorldNews |
Entertainment | Creepy, Documentaries, Gaming, ListenToThis, Movies, Music, NoSleep, Sports, Television and Videos |
Discussion-based | AskReddit, AskScience, Books, ExplainLikeImFive, History, IAmA and TwoXChromosomes |
Humor/light-hearted | DataIsBeautiful, Funny, InternetIsBeautiful, Jokes, NotTheOnion, ShowerThoughts, TIFU and UpliftingNews |
Image sharing | Art, Aww, EarthPorn, Gifs, MildlyInteresting, OldSchoolCool, PhotoshopBattles and Pics |
Self-improvement | DIY, Fitness, Food, GetMotivated, LifeProTips, PersonalFinance, Philosophy and WritingPrompts |
Technology | Futurology and Gadgets |
Meta | Announcements and Blog |
When items (links or text posts) are submitted to a subreddit, users (redditors) can vote for or against them (upvote/downvote). Each subreddit has a front page that shows newer submissions that have been rated highly. Redditors can also post comments about the submission, and respond back and forth in a conversation-tree of comments; the comments themselves can also be upvoted and downvoted. The front page of the site itself shows a combination of the highest-rated posts out of all the subreddits a user is subscribed to.
Front-page rank – for both the general front page and for individual subreddits – is determined by the age of the submission, positive ("upvoted") to negative ("downvoted") feedback ratio and the total vote-count.[15] Dozens of submissions cycle through these front pages daily.
Users
Registering an account with Reddit is free and does not require an email address to complete. Users are referred to as "redditors". When logged in, users have the ability to vote on submissions and comments to increase or decrease their visibility and submit links and comments. Users can also create their own subreddit on a topic of their choosing, and interested users can add it to their frontpage by subscribing to it. For example, as of May 2015, the Wikipedia subreddit – subtitled "the most interesting pages on Wikipedia" – has over 151,000 subscribers.[16] Reddit comments and submissions are occasionally abbreviated and peppered with terms that are understood within (and in many cases also outside) the Reddit community, ranging from OP (for "original poster" – the user who posted the submission being commented upon) to NSFW (for "not safe for work" - indicating the post has graphic or sexually explicit content).[17] Users earn "link karma" and "comment karma" for submitting popular links and comments, which accumulate as point values on their user profile. Users may also be gifted "Reddit gold" if another user has well received the comment or post, generally due to humorous or high quality content. This is also known as gilding. Reddit has also created a system of points called "creddits". Reddit gold "creddits" are like gift certificates: each creddit you have allows you to give one month of Reddit gold to someone else. The points do not lead to a prize as they are meant to stand in as a badge of honor for the user among their peers, although redditors have attempted to redeem their points before.[18]
Reddit also allows submissions that do not link externally. These are called "self posts" or "text submissions". Many discussion-based subreddits allow only text-only submissions such as "AskReddit" – where users are only allowed to pose broad, discussion based questions to the community at large. Self posts do not accumulate karma points for the submitter, but they can still be voted on like other content.
Reddit communities occasionally coordinate Reddit-external projects such as skewing polls on other websites, such as in 2007 when Greenpeace allowed web users to decide the name of a killer whale it was tracking. Reddit users voted en masse to name the whale "Mr. Splashy Pants", and Reddit administrators further encouraged this by changing the site logo to a whale during the voting. In December of that year, Mister Splashy Pants was announced as the winner of the competition.[19]
Within the site, redditors commemorate their "cake day" once a year, which is the anniversary of the day the user's account was first created. The "cake day" offers no special benefit, except that a small icon representing a slice of cake appears next to that user's name for 24 hours.[20]
Redditors can "friend" one another, which gives a redditor quick access to posting and comments of their friend list. The commenting system and friend system, along with a certain "Reddit ethos" (called reddiquette on Reddit), lend Reddit aspects of a social networking service, though not to the extent of Facebook, Google+, and other websites aimed at providing social networking services.
The Reddit community also socializes at local parks and bars around the world,[21] and many localized subreddits for local meetings exist.
Subreddits
Reddit entries are organized into areas of interest called "subreddits". Historically, the front page was the "main reddit", and other areas were "subreddits". There is now no main subreddit. Instead, there are multiple default subreddits dealing with topics such as books, television, and music. Any registered user may create a subreddit, although a link to do so does not appear on the user's homepage until after thirty days.[22] There are over 5,400 active subreddits to peruse,[23][24] with a default set of 50 subreddits as of May 2014.
Users may customize what is shown on their personal front page by subscribing to individual subreddits through a page that shows all subreddits available. The site's general front page is also accessible via a link to "all" at the top of the individual user's customized front page.
In an interview with Memeburn, Reddit GM, Martin noted that the platform's "approach is to give the community moderators or curators as much control as possible so that they can shape and cultivate the type of communities they want".[25]
IAmA and AMA
One of the most popular subreddits is IAmA ("I Am A") where a user may post "AMAs" (for "Ask Me Anything"), or similarly "AMAAs" (for "Ask Me Almost/Absolutely Anything") – prompts for others to ask questions about any topic. AMAs are open to all Reddit users, and use the site's comment system for both questions and answers; it is similar to a press conference, but online. This subreddit was founded in May 2009.[26] From 2013 to 2015, Victoria Taylor assisted reddit's volunteer community in presenting interviews.[27][28][29]
A number of notable individuals have participated in the IAmA subreddit, including United States President Barack Obama[30][31] (while campaigning for the 2012 election), Dave Grohl,[32] Madonna,[33] Chris Hadfield[34] (who answered questions from the International Space Station), Bill Gates,[35] Ron Paul,[36] Stephen Colbert,[37] Psy, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Rachel Maddow, Renée Fleming, M. Shadows, Louis C.K., Roger Federer, Larry King, Philip Zimbardo, Bill Nye,[38] Stan Lee, John Mather, David Copperfield, Paul Krugman, Danny Boyle, rapper J. Cole,[39] Al Gore, Roger Ebert, Michael Bolton, Gary Johnson, Lawrence Krauss, Jill Stein, Kevin Rudd, Julie Benz,[40] Amanda Palmer,[41] Tim Ferriss,[42] Gordon Ramsay,[43] Peter Dinklage,[44] and Neil deGrasse Tyson.[45] As of April 2015, Barack Obama's AMA is the highest rated on the site;[46] the increased traffic brought down many parts of the website when the AMA occurred on August 29, 2012.[47]
Celebrities participating in IAmAs have seen both positive and negative responses. Woody Harrelson's[48] AMA was criticized after Harrelson declined to answer questions that were unrelated to the movie Rampart he was promoting.[49] In contrast, rapper Snoop Dogg attracted 1.6 million page views[50] after conducting an AMA that provided several candid responses to the community's questions.[51]
Other than Woody Harrelson, Bollywood actress Priyanka Chopra's[52] AMA was criticized for evasiveness when she focused on promoting her upcoming album to the detriment of other questions. A particularly well received AMA of 2014 was that of Peter Dinklage,[53] best known for his role as Tyrion Lannister in the HBO drama series Game of Thrones. Redditors attribute the thread's success to the thoroughness of his responses and the fact that he stayed online much longer than he was expected to so he could spend more time with his fans. The actor departed by commenting:
This feels like being interviewed by a hundred thousand news anchors at once! But much friendlier anchors...who seem to know their material...I really appreciate everyone's enthusiasm and questions. I tried to move another engagement to make more time but it's really hard during shoots. I am going to try to answer a few more short ones now. And remember: If you see me on the street and want a photo, ask! It's just weird when your kid asks for directions.[54]
On July 2, 2015, hundreds of subreddits, including several with over a million subscribers, were set to private by their respective moderators after Reddit's director of talent, Victoria Taylor, was dismissed.[55][56][57][58] Sources close to Reddit cited an increased focus on commercializing AMAs as the most likely reason.[59][60]
<span id=""The Button"">The Button
On April 1, 2015, a subreddit called "thebutton", a social experiment was created for April Fools' Day. It featured a button and a 60-second countdown timer prominently above the submissions section. When any user clicked the button the timer would globally reset back to 60 seconds,[61] and the user's "flair" (an icon next to the user's name) would change color based on the time remaining when the button was clicked. Flair colors were granted based on the spectrum gradient from purple to red with purple signifying up to 60 seconds and red as low as 0 seconds. The survival of the timer was limited because users could only click it once and only user accounts created before April 1 were eligible to participate.
The countdown prematurely reached zero several times due to technical issues but eventually expired in absence of any issues on June 5, 2015 after which the subreddit was closed.[62]
History
In June 2005,[63] Reddit was founded in Medford, Massachusetts by Steve Huffman and Alexis Ohanian, both 22-year-old graduates of the University of Virginia.[64] The team expanded to include Christopher Slowe in November 2005. Between November 2005 and January 2006 Reddit merged with Aaron Swartz's company Infogami, and Swartz became an equal owner of the resulting parent company, Not A Bug.[65][66] Condé Nast Publications, owner of Wired, acquired Reddit on October 31, 2006, and the team moved to San Francisco.[67] In January 2007, Swartz was fired.[68]
By the end of 2008, the team had grown to include Erik Martin, Jeremy Edberg,[69] David King,[70] and Mike Schiraldi.[71] In 2009, Huffman and Ohanian moved on to form Hipmunk, recruiting Slowe[72] and King[73] shortly thereafter. In May 2010, Reddit was named in Lead411's "2010 Hottest San Francisco Companies" list.[74] In July 2010, after explosive traffic growth, Reddit introduced Reddit Gold, offering new features for a price of $3.99/month or $29.99/year.[75] Reddit Gold adds a number of features to the interface, including the ability to display more comments on a page, access to the private subreddit /r/lounge, and notifications whenever one's username is mentioned in a comment. It's also possible to endow comments or submissions of other users and thereby give a gold membership to them as an anonymous present.[76]
On September 6, 2011, Reddit became operationally independent of Condé Nast, now operating as a separate subsidiary of its parent company, Advance Publications.[77] On January 11, 2012, Reddit announced that it would be participating in a 12-hour sitewide blackout in protest of the Stop Online Piracy Act.[78] The blackout occurred on January 18 and coincided with the blackouts of Wikipedia and several other websites. In May 2012, Reddit joined the Internet Defense League, a group formed to organize future protests.[79] On February 14, 2013, Reddit began accepting the digital currency bitcoin for its Reddit Gold subscription service through a partnership with bitcoin payment processor Coinbase.[80]
In October 2014, Reddit announced Redditmade, a service which allowed moderators to create merchandise for their subreddits. Redditmade closed in February 2015.[81] In November 2014, Chief Executive Yishan Wong resigned and co-founder Ohanian returned as the full-time executive chairman. Ellen Pao, Reddit's business and partnerships strategist became the interim chief executive.[82] On July 10, 2015, Pao resigned and was replaced by Steve Huffman as CEO.[83][84]
In October 2015, Reddit announced a news portal called Upvoted, designed to broaden the reach of Reddit as a standalone site featuring editorial content from Reddit users.[85]
Technology
Reddit was originally written in Common Lisp but was rewritten in Python in December 2005.[3] The reasons given for the switch were wider access to code libraries and greater development flexibility. The Python web framework that former Reddit employee Swartz developed to run the site, web.py, is now available as an open-source project.[86] On June 18, 2008, Reddit became an open source project.[87] With the exception of the anti-spam/cheating portions, all of the code and libraries written for Reddit became freely available on GitHub.[88] As of November 10, 2009, Reddit uses Pylons as its web framework.[89]
As of November 10, 2009, Reddit has decommissioned their physical servers and migrated to Amazon Web Services.[90] Reddit uses PostgreSQL as their primary datastore and is slowly moving to Apache Cassandra, a column-oriented datastore. It uses RabbitMQ for offline processing, HAProxy for load balancing and memcached for caching. In early 2009, Reddit started using jQuery.[91] On June 7, 2010, Reddit staff launched a revamped mobile interface featuring rewritten CSS, a new color scheme, and a multitude of improvements.[92]
On July 21, 2010, Reddit outsourced the Reddit search engine to Flaptor, who used its search product IndexTank.[93] As of July 12, 2012, Reddit uses Amazon CloudSearch.[94] There are several unofficial applications that use the Reddit API in the Google Play store, and F-Droid repository. Examples include: Reddit is Fun,[95] Andreddit,[96] F5, BaconReader,[97] Reddit Sync[98] and an Android tablet specific application called Reddita.[99] There are also several Windows apps used to access Reddit, including unofficial Reddit apps such as ReddHub[100] and Reddit To Go!.[101] An unofficial desktop application Reditr[102] exists that is compatible with Windows, OS X, Linux and ChromeOS.
There are several Reddit applications for iOS. These include Alien Blue, Karma, Upvote, iReddit, and iPad-specific applications such as Reddzine and Biscuit.[103] In September 2014, an official mobile application for browsing AMA (Ask Me Anything) threads was released for the iOS and Android platforms under the name Ask me Anything.[104] As of October 2014, Alien Blue is now the official iOS Reddit app.[105]
Demographics
According to Reddit's Audience and Demographics page, as of December 2015, 53% of Reddit users are male and 54% are from the United States.[106] According to Google Ad Planner's estimate, as of May 2013, the median Reddit user is 18–29 years of age. Pewinternet.org has stated that 6% of all American adult Internet users have used Reddit and males were twice as likely to be Reddit users as females.[107]
Community and culture
The website is known for its open nature and diverse user community that generate its content. Its demographics allows for wide-ranging subject areas, or main subreddits, that receive much attention, as well as the ability for smaller subreddits to serve more niche purposes. For example, the University of Reddit, a subreddit that exists to communally teach, emerged from the ability to enter and leave the online forum, the "classroom", at will, and classes ranging from computer science to music, to fine art theory exist.[108] The unique possibilities that subreddits provide create new opportunities for raising attention and fostering discussion across many areas. In gaining popularity in terms of unique users per day, Reddit has been a platform for many to raise publicity for a number of causes. And with that increased ability to garner attention and a large audience, users can use one of the largest communities on the Internet for new, revolutionary, and influential purposes.[109]
Its popularity has enabled users to take unprecedented advantage of such a large community. Its innovative socially ranked rating and sorting system drives a method that is useful for fulfilling certain goals of viewership or simply finding answers to interesting questions. User sentiments about the website's function and structure include feelings about the breadth and depth of the discussions on Reddit and how the site makes it easy to discover new and interesting items. Almost all of the user reviews on Alexa.com, which rates Reddit's monthly unique traffic rating 125th in the United States, mention Reddit's "good content" as a likable quality. However, others raise the negative aspects of the potential for Reddit's communities to possess a "hive mind" of sorts,[110] embodying some negative aspects of group interaction theories like crowd psychology and collective consciousness.
Philanthropic efforts
Reddit has been known as the instigator of several charity projects, some short and others long-term, in order to benefit others. A selection of major events are outlined below:
- In early December 2010, members of the Christianity subreddit decided to hold a fundraiser[111] and later members of the atheism subreddit decided to give some friendly competition,[112] cross-promoting[113] fundraising drives for Médecins Sans Frontières (Doctors Without Borders) and World Vision's Clean Water Fund, respectively. Later, the Islam subreddit joined in, raising money for Islamic Relief. In less than a week, the three communities (as well as the Reddit community at large) raised over $50,000.[114] Most of this was raised by the atheism subreddit, though the smaller Christianity subreddit had a higher average donation amount per subscriber.[115] A similar donation drive in 2011 saw the atheism subreddit raise over $200,000 for charity.[116]
- In early October 2010, a story was posted on Reddit about a seven-year-old girl, Kathleen Edward, who was in the advanced stages of Huntington's disease. The girl's neighbors were taunting her and her family. Redditors banded together and gave the girl a shopping spree[117][118] at Tree Town Toys, a toy store local to the story owned by a Reddit user.
- Reddit started the largest Secret Santa program in the world, which is still in operation to date. For the 2010 Holiday season, 92 countries were involved in the Secret Santa program. There were 17,543 participants, and $662,907.60 was collectively spent on gift purchases and shipping costs.[119][120][121] In 2014, about 200,000 users from 188 countries participated.[122]
- Members from Reddit donated over $600,000 to DonorsChoose in support of Stephen Colbert's March to Keep Fear Alive. The donation spree broke previous records for the most money donated to a single cause by the Reddit community and resulted in an interview with Colbert on Reddit.[123]
- Reddit users donated $185,356 to Direct Relief for Haiti after an earthquake devastated the nation in January 2010.[124]
- Reddit users donated over $70,000 to the Faraja Orphanage in the first 24 hours to help secure the orphanage after intruders robbed and attacked one of the volunteers, Omari, who survived a strike to the head from a machete.[125]
- In October 2012, Shitty Watercolour, a popular Redditor known for posting watercolor paintings on the website,[126][127][128] streamed live a 12-hour painting session on YouTube to raise money for charity: water, a non-profit organization which aims to provide potable drinking water in developing countries. Redditors donated a minimum of $10 to have a photo of their choice painted in a 5 cm by 5 cm (2 in×2 in) square section of large sheets of paper.[129][130] The paint-a-thon raised $2,700.[131]
- In February 2014, Reddit announced it would be donating 10% of its annual ad revenue to non-profits voted upon by its users.[132]
- Reddit continued this policy for 2015. $82,765 was donated to each of the following: Electronic Frontier Foundation, Planned Parenthood Federation of America, Doctors Without Borders, Erowid Center, Wikimedia Foundation, Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies, NPR, Free Software Foundation, Freedom From Religion Foundation, and Tor Project.[133]
Commercial activity
In February 2013, Betabeat published a post that recognized the influx of multi-national corporations like Costco, Taco Bell, Subaru, and McDonald's posting branded content on Reddit that was made to appear as if it was original content from legitimate Reddit users.[134] Reddit's former Director of Communications noted that while a large number of Chief Marketing Officers want to "infiltrate the reddit community on behalf of their brand," she emphasized that "self-promotion is frowned upon" and the site is "100 percent organic."[135][136][137][138] She recommended that advertisers design promotions that "spark conversations and feedback."[139] She recommended that businesses use AMAs to get attention for public figures, but cautioned "It is important to approach AMAs carefully and be aware that this may not be a fit for every project or client."[140] Nissan ran a successful Branded content promotion offering users free gifts to publicize a new car,[141][142] though the company was later ridiculed for suspected astroturfing when the CEO only answered puff piece questions on the site.[143][144] Taylor described these situations as "high risk" noting "We try hard to educate people that they have to treat questions that may seem irreverent or out of left field the same as they would questions about the specific project they are promoting."[145]
Reddit's users are more privacy-conscious than on other websites, using tools like AdBlock and proxies,[146] and they hate "feeling manipulated by brands" but respond well to "content that begs for intelligent viewers and participants."[147] Lauren Orsini writes in ReadWrite that "Reddit's huge community is the perfect hype machine for promoting a new movie, a product release, or a lagging political campaign" but "very specific set of etiquette. Redditors don't want to advertise for you, they want to talk to you."[148]
Journalists have used the site as a basis for stories, though they are advised by the site's policies to respect that "reddit's communities belong to their members" and to seek proper attribution for people's contributions.[149]
Reddit effect
Also known as the "Slashdot effect", the Reddit effect occurs when a smaller website has a high influx of traffic after being linked to on Reddit.[150] It is also called the "Reddit Hug of Death" among the website's users. Because Reddit is such a large site, the traffic is immense and can easily crash smaller sites. In order for users to see crashed websites, several Reddit bots have been created that take a snapshot of the website before large amounts of traffic flood the affected website.
"Restoring Truthiness" campaign
As a response to Glenn Beck's August 28, 2010, Restoring Honor rally (heavily promoted by him in his Fox News broadcasts during the summer), in September 2010 Reddit users started a movement to persuade Stephen Colbert to have a counter-rally in Washington, D.C.[151] The movement, which came to be called "Restoring Truthiness", was started by user mrsammercer, in a post where he described waking up from a dream in which Stephen Colbert was holding a satirical rally in D.C.[152]
He writes, "This would be the high water mark of American satire. Half a million people pretending to suspend all rational thought in unison. Perfect harmony. It'll feel like San Francisco in the late 60s, only we won't be able to get any acid."
The idea resonated with the Reddit community, which launched a campaign to bring the event to life. Over $600,000[153] was raised for charity to gain the attention of Colbert. The campaign was mentioned on-air several times, and when the Rally to Restore Sanity and/or Fear was held in Washington, D.C. on October 30, 2010, thousands of redditors made the journey.[154]
During a post-rally press conference, Reddit co-founder Ohanian asked, "What role did the Internet campaign play in convincing you to hold this rally?" Jon Stewart responded by saying that, though it was a very nice gesture, the two had already thought of the idea prior and the deposit on using the National Mall was already paid during the summer, so it acted mostly as a "validation of what we were thinking about attempting".[155] In a message to the Reddit community, Colbert later added, "I have no doubt that your efforts to organize and the joy you clearly brought to your part of the story contributed greatly to the turnout and success."[156]
Controversies involving Reddit
The website generally lets moderators on individual subreddits make editorial decisions about what content to allow, and has a history of permitting some subreddits dedicated to controversial content.[157] Many of the default pages are highly moderated, with the science subreddit banning climate change denialism,[158] and the "News" section banning opinion pieces and columns.[159] Reddit has changed its site-wide editorial policies several times, sometimes in reaction to controversies.[160][161][162][163] Reddit has had a history of giving a platform to objectionable, but legal content, and in 2011 news media covered the way that jailbait was being shared on the site, before the site changed their policies to explicitly ban "Suggestive or sexual content featuring minors".[164]
Following some controversial incidents of Internet vigilantism, Reddit introduced a strict rule against the publication of non-public personally-identifying information via the site (colloquially known as doxxing). Those who break the rule are subject to a site-wide ban, and their posts and even entire communities may be removed for breaking the rule.
On December 16, 2010, a Redditor named Matt posted a link describing how he has donated a kidney, and included a JustGive link to encourage users to give donations to the American Cancer Society.[165] After an initially positive reaction, Reddit users began to become suspicious of Matt's intentions, and suggested that he was keeping the donations for himself. Users telephoned his home and he received death threats. Matt eventually proved that he was genuine by uploading his doctor's records.[166]
On October 18, 2011, an IT manager submitted a post to the subreddit "gameswap" offering Redditors to trade one of 312 codes he had been given for the game Deus Ex: Human Revolution.[167] A group of users obtained his personal details, and began to blackmail him for the codes.[168] The Monday after uploading the post, he received 138 threatening phone calls both at home and at his job, and by the end of the day he had been fired.[169]
Following the 2013 Boston Marathon bombings, Reddit faced criticism after users wrongly identified a number of people as suspects.[170] Notable among misidentified bombing suspects was Sunil Tripathi, a student reported missing before the bombings took place. A body reported to be Sunil's was found in Rhode Island's Providence River on April 25, 2013 as reported by the Rhode Island Health Department. The cause of death was not immediately known, but authorities said they did not suspect foul play.[171] The family later confirmed Tripathi's death was a result of suicide.[172] Reddit general manager Martin later issued an apology for this behavior, criticizing the "online witch hunts and dangerous speculation" that took place on the website.[173] The incident was later referenced in the season 5 episode of the CBS TV series The Good Wife titled "Whack-a-Mole".[174] and The Newsroom.[175][176]
In late October 2013, the moderators of the politics subreddit banned a large group of websites. Many were left wing opinion websites, such as Mother Jones, The Huffington Post, Salon, Alternet, Rawstory, The Daily Kos, Truthout, Media Matters, and ThinkProgress as well as some popular progressive blog sites, such as Democratic Underground and Crooks and Liars. They also banned a number of right wing sites—Drudge Report, Breitbart, The Daily Caller, Dailypaul, Power Line, and Reason. Salon reported that "the section's moderators explained in a post on Tuesday, the goal is 'to reduce the number of blogspam submissions and sensationalist titles.' The purge, the moderators explained, is also aimed at sites that provide lots of "bad journalism."[177] The December 2013 list of banned websites has been modified since late October, and sites with original content, such as Mother Jones and The Huffington Post, are allowed.[178] Moderators also banned RT, which moderators stated was due to vote manipulation and spam, though one moderator stated that he wanted RT banned because it is Kremlin backed.[179][180]
In August 2014, photos from the 2014 celebrity photo hack were widely disseminated across the site.[181][182] A dedicated subreddit called "TheFappening" was created for this purpose,[183] and contained links to most if not all of the criminally obtained explicit images.[184][185][186][187][188] Some images of Liz Lee and McKayla Maroney from the leak were identified by Reddit users and outside commentators as child pornography because the photos were taken when the women were underage.[189] The subreddit was banned on September 6.[190] The scandal led to wider criticisms concerning the website's administration from The Verge and The Daily Dot.[191][192]
Also in August 2014, in response to the GamerGate controversy, reddit moderators and administrators censored a large amount of content. One thread in the "gaming" subreddit had almost 24,000 comments removed.[193] Multiple subreddits were deleted by administrators for voicing opinions on Zoe Quinn, Anita Sarkeesian, Brianna Wu and similarly important GamerGate controversy figures. The subreddit /r/ZoeQuinnDiscussion was banned for violating the Reddit rules.[194] Administrators defended this response when questioned, blaming 4chan for raiding threads and causing harm. This was debated by some redditors.[195] An anonymous subreddit moderator claims he was removed for leaking correspondence between himself and Zoe Quinn.[196]
On December 18, 2014, Reddit took the unusual step of banning a subreddit 'SonyGOP' that was being used to distribute hacked Sony files.[197]
After the Charleston church shooting, Reddit was cited as a website with "skewed enforcement" due to a recent banning of five subreddits which did not include a subreddit that went on to include "posts expressing support" for Dylann Roof, the sole suspect of the church shooting.[198] Reddit issued a statement to BBC that they are "committed to promoting free expression." and that "There are some subreddits with very little viewership that get highlighted repeatedly for their content, but those are a tiny fraction of the content on the site."[199]
After Pao became CEO, Reddit shut down the 150,000 subscriber subreddit 'fatpeoplehate' and four others on June 10, 2015, citing issues related to harassment.[200] This move was seen as very controversial with some commenters saying the bans went too far and some saying not far enough.[201] Reddit users also criticized Pao's lawsuit and complained about deletions of posts concerning Pao on Reddit.[202]
On July 2, 2015, Reddit began experiencing a series of blackouts as moderators set popular subreddit communities to private, in an event dubbed "AMAgeddon" – a portmanteau of AMA ("ask me anything") and Armageddon. This was done in protest of the recent firing of Victoria Taylor, an administrator who helped organize citizen-led interviews with famous people on the popular "Ask me Anything" subreddit. Organizers of the blackout also expressed resentment about the recent severance of the communication between Reddit and the moderators of subreddits.[203] The blackout intensified on July 3 when former community manager David Croach gave an AMA about being fired. Before deleting his posts, he stated that Ellen Pao dismissed him with one year of health coverage when he had cancer and did not recover quickly enough.[204][205] Following this, a Change.org petition to remove Pao as CEO of Reddit Inc. reached over 200,000 signatures.[206][207][208] Pao posted a response on July 3 as well as an extended version of it on July 6 in which she apologized for bad communication and not delivering on promises. She also apologized on behalf of the other administrators and noted that problems already existed over the past several years.[209][210][211][212] On July 10, Pao resigned as CEO and was replaced by former CEO and co-founder Steve Huffman.[83][213]
See also
General Reddit-specific |
Similar websites |
References
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It's time for Reddit gold to make the shift from a one-week experiment to a true service with a clear pricing structure and at least a few whistles and bells.
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- ↑ Kumparak, Greg (2014-10-15). "Reddit Acquires Alien Blue, The Most Popular Unofficial Reddit App". TechCrunch. AOL. Retrieved 2014-10-25.
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(help) - ↑ Duggan, Maeve; Smith, Aaron (2013-07-03). "6% of Online Adults are Reddit Users". Pew Research Internet Project. Retrieved 2014-10-25.
- ↑ "The University of Reddit". UReddit. Retrieved December 11, 2013.
- ↑ "Could Reddit be the world's most influential website?". BlueGlass. Retrieved April 26, 2012.
- ↑ "Reddit.com Site Info". Alexa.com. Retrieved April 26, 2012.
- ↑ "If every member of r/Christianity donates just $4.45, we can build a health clinic in an impoverished area that desperately needs one. Let's do it!". December 9, 2010.
- ↑ "OK, Battle stations everybody. Tonight we show r/Christianity what we are made of...". December 9, 2010.
- ↑ "Dogs and cats living together! Mass hysteria! r/atheism and r/Christianity have a friendly competition up for a holiday charity drive that is spilling over into other subreddi". Reddit.com. December 10, 2010. Retrieved December 4, 2011.
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- ↑ Stryker, Cole (2010-12-10). Kathleen Edward, Harassed Girl with Huntington's Diseas, Thanks Reddit. Urlesque. Retrieved April 20, 2011.
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- ↑ Watercutter, Angela (June 12, 2012). "Reddit's (Best) Worst Painter Turns Comment Threads Into Art". Wired. Retrieved June 9, 2013.
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- ↑ Holiday, Ryan (February 21, 2013). "Hail Corporate: The Increasingly Insufferable Fakery of Brands on Reddit". Betabeat. Archived from the original on December 30, 2014.
- ↑ "Victoria Taylor Tells PAN how Reddit Stays Genuine and What That Means for Marketers". PAN communications. 21 May 2014.
- ↑ "On Reddit, Unlike Other Social Sites, It's About the Topic, Not the Brand". PR News. 28 Oct 2013.
Brands that are mentioned on the site are in a casual context, similar to being in a local bar or coffee shop, rather than a mall, which is much more of a commercial space
- ↑ "To Learn About reddit, Listen First". 3 Sep 2014.
Victoria Taylor, director of communications at reddit, said the point of posting to reddit is not to have content go viral; it is to build credibility
- ↑ "Social Media and Journalism: An Intrinsically Linked Organism". Brandwatch. 20 May 2014.
The communities on Reddit don't want to feel used or exploited. That's where listening comes in.
- ↑ "The Real Low-Down From Reddit". Tech Affect. 22 Oct 2014.
- ↑ Carrie Fung (13 Sep 2013). "When the Narwhal Bacons and Why it Matters to PR Pros". EngagePR blog.
- ↑ "Nissan Buys Gifts for Redditors – and Some Love for Itself". Digday. 21 Nov 2013.
Victoria Taylor, reddit's director of communications, told Digiday that Nissan's reddit adventure was one of the best campaigns the site has seen in a long time. "The community really responded well to the two community managers"
- ↑ "Cheatsheet: How brands can win reddit". Digday. 3 Feb 2014.
"Going into it, we are honest with advertisers that redditors are opinionated," said Victoria Taylor, reddit's director of communications. "Anywhere you have opinions, people are going to have a dialog and disagree." Advertisers have to be willing to engage honestly — and cleverly — with the reddit community to win their trust.
- ↑ "Nissan, Reddit defend authenticity of questions in Ghosn AMA". PR Week. 14 Jan 2015.
While Taylor said it's a positive that users demand authenticity, transparency, and accountability on Reddit, she noted that "it's unfortunate that people tend to try to look for negative examples." She admitted that the AMA with Nissan was not the most successful edition the platform has had... Reddit, she said, will always be "open and transparent if something doesn't seem genuine."
- ↑ "Walking a fine line as a communicator on Reddit". Muck Rack. 3 Mar 2015.
- ↑ "Reddit AMAs: A minefield worth crossing". PR Week. 4 Apr 2014.
- ↑ Nicole Spector (18 June 2014). "Reddit's Safe Play in the Game of Geo-Targeting".
- ↑ Megan Haynes (5 June 2014). "Reddit knows: new study reveals what Canadians want". StrategyOnline.ca.
- ↑ "Let your audience ask you anything". ReadWrite. 24 Sep 2014.
- ↑ "Reddit - the front page of the internet: New user behaviour and social media trends". BBC Academy: Journalism. BBC via YouTube. 7 Nov 2013.
- ↑ abc blog (August 31, 2012). "The Reddit effect". ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation). Archived from the original on November 1, 2014. Retrieved October 1, 2013.
- ↑ Friedman, Megan (September 14, 2010). "Reddit Campaign for Colbert Rally Breaks Donation Record". Time NewsFeed. Retrieved December 4, 2011.
- ↑ mrsammercer (August 31, 2010). "I've had a vision and I can't shake it: Colbert needs to hold a satirical rally in DC". Reddit.com. Retrieved December 4, 2011.
- ↑ "Restoring Truthiness donor page". Donorschoose.org. Retrieved December 4, 2011.
- ↑ Schiraldi, Mike (November 12, 2010). "Buy Shirts, Remember the Rally, Question Colbert, and Smile". blog.reddit. Retrieved December 4, 2011.
- ↑ Rally to Restore Sanity – Press Conference – Video Mediaite. October 30, 2010.
- ↑ "Stephen Colbert has answered your questions : IAmA". Reddit.com. November 30, 2010. Retrieved December 4, 2011.
- ↑ "Rules of Reddit". Retrieved October 14, 2012.
- ↑ "Critics blast Reddit over climate-change skeptic ban". Fox News. 19 Dec 2013.
Reddit's director of communications told FoxNews.com that while it was Allen's prerogative to ban climate-change skeptics from "/r/science", his statements "do not reflect the views of Reddit as a whole, or other science or climate-oriented subreddits. Each subreddit community is entitled to its own views, and anyone who wants to start their own subreddit is welcome to do so devoted to their views, opinions or interests"
- ↑ Sam Kirkland (25 Nov 2014). "How to get your news site banned from Reddit". Poynter.
If you don't like how a moderator is managing a subreddit, the best solution is to start your own subreddit and moderate it with different rules, said Victoria Taylor, director of communications for Reddit.
- ↑ "blog.reddit -- what's new on reddit: reddit, we need to talk...". redditblog.com.
- ↑ "A necessary change in policy : blog". reddit.
- ↑ Yishan Wong: "We stand for freedom of speech. We will uphold existing rules against posting dox on reddit. But the reality is those rules end at our platform, and we will respect journalism as a form of speech that we don't ban. We believe further change can come only from example-setting."
- ↑ Rob Price. "Reddit's old CEO rewrites the history of Reddit and says 'the purge' of users will begin". Business Insider Australia.
- ↑ Morris, Kevin (February 12, 2012). "Reddit bans "suggestive or sexual content" of minors". The Daily Dot. Retrieved June 12, 2014.
- ↑ BadgerMatt (December 16, 2010). "My story as an anonymous kidney donor and my plea for your help". Reddit. Archived from the original on December 20, 2010. Retrieved July 14, 2014.
- ↑ Coscarelli, Joe (December 19, 2010). "The Dangers of Going Viral: Kidney Donor Attacked by Reddit For Plugging Charity". The Village Voice. Voice Media. Archived from the original on December 22, 2010. Retrieved July 14, 2010.
- ↑ nyan_all_the_links (July 15, 2014). "[H] Deus Ex: Human Revolution (300+ copies) [Steam], [W] Any and all steam offers". Reddit. Archived from the original on October 28, 2011. Retrieved July 15, 2014.
- ↑ Morris, Kevin (October 28, 2011). "A sweet deal on Reddit gets IT exec fired". The Daily Dot. Archived from the original on July 15, 2014. Retrieved July 14, 2014.
- ↑ Morris, Kevin (October 29, 2011). "Game swap leads to harassment, firing, apology". The Daily Dot. Archived from the original on July 15, 2014. Retrieved July 14, 2014.
- ↑ "Innocents accused in online manhunt". 3 News NZ. April 22, 2013.
- ↑ Buncombe, Andrew (April 26, 2013). "Family of Sunil Tripathi - missing student wrongly linked to Boston marathon bombing - thank well-wishers for messages of support". The Independent (London). Archived from the original on 17 January 2015. Retrieved 17 January 2015.
The cause of the student's death has still be determined but the medical examiner said no foul play was suspected.
- ↑ Nark, Jason. "The Boston bombing's forgotten victim". Philadelphia Daily News. Archived from the original on 31 October 2014. Retrieved 31 October 2014.
Akhil spent the most time with Sunny before his suicide, weekends at Brown where he tried to help his youngest child foresee a future.
- ↑ Martin, Erik. "Reflections on the Recent Boston Crisis". Reddit.com. Retrieved May 3, 2013.
- ↑ Harnick, Chris (November 24, 2013). "'The Good Wife' Recap: Alicia Takes on Anonymous Posters in 'Whack-A-Mole'". The Huffington Post. Retrieved November 25, 2013.
- ↑ Hathaway, Jay (11 November 2014). "Here's How The Newsroom Covered Reddit's Failed Boston Bombing Manhunt". Retrieved 27 June 2015.
- ↑ Fallon, Kevin. "'Newsroom' Premiere: Aaron Sorkin Puts CNN on Blast Over the Boston Bombing". Retrieved 27 June 2015.
- ↑ Oremus, Will (November 1, 2013). "Reddit politics: r/politics mods ban Mother Jones, others for "bad journalism."". Slate. Retrieved December 3, 2013.
- ↑ "filtereddomains – politics". Reddit.com. Retrieved 2014-08-08.
- ↑ "Reddit's r/news bans RT.com for alleged spamming". The Daily Dot. Retrieved December 26, 2014.
- ↑ "Reddit moderator pushed for RT ban 'simply because it's Kremlin'". Retrieved December 26, 2014.
- ↑ "Say hello to men who hate NSA spying but blame women for being spied on". The Verge. September 1, 2014. Retrieved October 7, 2014.
- ↑ Vincent, James (September 1, 2014). "Is Apple's iCloud safe after leak of Jennifer Lawrence and other celebrities' nude photos?". The Independent (London). Retrieved October 7, 2014.
- ↑ "Celebrity Naked Photos Leaked – #theFappening – So You Have A Girlfriend". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved October 7, 2014.
- ↑ "The Fappening Is Being Broadcast Live On Reddit With 100,000+ Viewers". Business 2 Community. Retrieved October 7, 2014.
- ↑ Anthony Johnston, Metro World News (October 10, 2014). "Security expert weighs in on 'The Fappening' and the iCloud". Metro. Retrieved December 26, 2014.
- ↑ "Man who leaked celebrity nude photos admits he is running from authorities". Daily Mail (London). September 1, 2014. Retrieved October 7, 2014.
- ↑ "Hunt begins for hacker behind Jennifer Lawrence nude photo theft". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved October 7, 2014.
- ↑ "Jennifer Lawrence nude photos leaked: Hacker posts explicit pics". NewsComAu. September 3, 2014. Retrieved October 7, 2014.
- ↑ Price, Rob. "There's child porn in the massive celebrity nudes hack". The Daily Dot. Retrieved 2 September 2014.
- ↑ Geller, Eric. "Reddit just banned the subreddit at the center of Celebgate". The Daily Dot. Retrieved 8 September 2014.
- ↑ Sottek, T.C. (2014-09-08). "Reddit is a failed state". The Verge. Vox Media. Retrieved 2014-11-02.
- ↑ Sankin, Aaron. "Is Reddit broken beyond repair?". The Daily Dot. Retrieved 2 November 2014.
- ↑ "TotalBiscuit discusses the state of games journalism, Steam Greenlight, ethics, DMCA abuse and Depression Quest. : gaming". reddit.
- ↑ r/ZoeQuinnDiscussion. Reddit https://www.reddit.com/r/ZoeQuinnDiscussion. Retrieved 9 February 2016. Missing or empty
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(help) - ↑ "cupcake1713 comments on Latest Zoe Quinn drama explodes. SpiritualSuccessors takes on the job of undertaker and ferryman across the styx to /r/Shadowban.". reddit.
- ↑ "Recording XM - 2014". SoundCloud.
- ↑ Goldman, David (December 29, 2014). "Reddit takes down Sony hack forum". CNN. Retrieved 4 January 2015.
- ↑ "What should social networks do about hate speech? - BBC News". BBC News. Retrieved July 2, 2015.
- ↑ "What should social networks do about hate speech? - BBC News". BBC News. Retrieved July 3, 2015.
- ↑ Bokhari, Allum. "Will Reddit Revolt Against Ellen Pao?". Breitbart. Retrieved 11 June 2015.
- ↑ Woollacott, Emma. "Users Flock To Voat As Reddit Shuts Harassing Groups". Forbes. Retrieved 11 June 2015.
- ↑ Celarier, Michelle (18 March 2015). "Users lash out at Reddit boss for 'deleting' posts on hubby's lawsuit". New York Post. Retrieved 27 June 2015.
- ↑ "Reddit in uproar after staff sacking". BBC News. BBC. 3 July 2015. Retrieved 3 July 2015.
About 100 chat sections, or sub-reddits, that together have millions of readers are believed to have been shut. Reddit's only comment about the issue has been to say that it did not talk about 'individual employee matters'. The protests were led by the volunteer moderators of the AMA section, which said in an explanatory posting that they needed Ms Taylor to keep the sub-reddit functioning. Ms Taylor helped organise guests for AMAs and worked to verify that people due to answer questions were who they said they were. There had been no explanation of why she was suddenly sacked, said the administrators.
- ↑ "Reddit: Laute Rufe nach Absetzung von CEO Ellen Pao". 4 July 2015. Retrieved 5 July 2015.
Zwar sind einige Foren wieder entsperrt, trotzdem ist Pao weiterhin Ziel vielerlei Angriffe. Zusätzliches Öl ins Feuer goss ein ehemaliger Community Manager der Online-Community, der angab von der Reddit-Chefin aufgrund seiner Krebserkrankung gefeuert worden zu sein. Zuvor wurde dem an Leukämie erkrankten Mitarbeiter eingeräumt, beim Unternehmen zu verbleiben – allerdings meldete sich Pao nur wenig später und gab ihm zu wissen, dass er aufgrund seiner Erkrankung nicht mehr bei Reddit verbleiben könnte. So zumindest die Behauptung, die wenig später offline ging.
- ↑ "Reddit's CEO Allegedly Fired an Employee For Having Cancer and Not Recovering Fast Enough". Retrieved 5 July 2015.
- ↑ McGregor, Jena (6 July 2015). "More than 200k people have signed a petition calling for Reddit's Ellen Pao to step down". The Washington Post. Retrieved 7 July 2015.
- ↑ Musil, Steven (5 July 2015). "Petition for Pao resignation from Reddit grows to 130K". Cnet. Retrieved 5 July 2015.
- ↑ Malik, Naureen; Jones, Tim (5 July 2015). "Reddit CEO Pao Under Fire as Users Protest Removal of Executive". Bloomberg. Retrieved 5 July 2015.
- ↑ Reddit CEO Ellen Pao apologizes: 'We screwed up' By Laurie Segall and Chris Isidore CNN.com July 6, 2015
- ↑ Reddit CEO Ellen Pao Issues an Apology for the Direction of the Site by Laura Entis FoxNews.com July 06, 2015
- ↑ Jack Linshi (July 6, 2015). "Ellen Pao: Reddit CEO Apologizes After Petition for Her to Resign". TIME.com.
- ↑ Titcomb, James (7 July 2015). "Petition calling for Reddit boss Ellen Pao to resign hits 200,000 as she admits 'we screwed up'". London: The Telegraph. Retrieved 7 July 2015.
- ↑ Mike, Isaac (10 July 2015). "Ellen Pao Is Stepping Down as Reddit's Chief". The New York Times (The New York Times Company). Retrieved 10 July 2015.
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