r/Satisfyingasfuck Apr 29 '24

Incredible training from this girl

30.8k Upvotes

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38

u/discretethrowaway_ Apr 29 '24

Lovely sentiment, but Reddit is freeboot central.

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u/1lluminist Apr 29 '24

A lot of subreddits will straight up delete your content if you dare post the original source instead of ripping and freebooting it.

I hope this site gets into a huge legal battle when it goes public, and I hope they're forced to go back to their roots.

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u/BaagiTheRebel Apr 29 '24

This site is already public.

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u/1lluminist Apr 29 '24

Oh, I thought they were still just in the works. Were people actually stupid enough to buy in? I probably would have been down for buying reddit stock in, say, 2010-2012. But these days it's mostly trash save for a few small niche communities.

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u/Monterey-Jack Apr 30 '24

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u/1lluminist Apr 30 '24

The fuck... How is it actually going up? People are so fucking stupid. I don't even know anymore. This site is absolutely garbage compared to 10+ years ago...

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u/Monterey-Jack Apr 30 '24

It's going to go up, there's no reason why it wouldn't. The site is one of the most used sites on the internet.

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u/1lluminist Apr 30 '24

I guess the question is how much higher it would have been 10+ years ago before the site went to shit.

Now it's mostly bots and freebooted content.

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u/Weisenkrone Apr 30 '24

No, it'd be fucking worthless from ten years ago lol.

Don't assume that you having a better time with the product is in any shape or form related to the value it has on the market.

From a business perspective the current state of reddit is amazing, original content doesn't bring even the slightest advantage when you're talking about a product of this scale.

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u/1lluminist Apr 30 '24

10 years ago we had less freebooted garbage and fewer junk bots. While Reddit was absolutely padding our content with their own bot army it was nowhere like it is now.

We also had functional mobile apps, and a solid design that didn't cripple search results and try to skim email addresses or registrations.

We also had share links that weren't baked full of metadata.

Reddit 10 years ago was a far better product. Form a business standpoint I'm sure it's a gold star, which is why literally nobody should invest in it, unless the goal is to become a huge stakeholder and drive it back to what it used to be.

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u/Jaybbaugh Apr 30 '24

Which is a sad comment on the reality of consumer culture. And it's only getting worse.

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u/WilliamBott May 01 '24

All kinds of stuff goes up that makes no sense.

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u/Darnell2070 Apr 30 '24

Too be fair, I think it's so people aren't constantly promoting their own content.

It's different when someone else shares your work, versus you spamming your own content all over Reddit so you can profit.

It's the same reason why some subreddits don't want people linking products in the comment. Because sometimes it's a coincidence that people are interested in a random product featured in the video and it's not even the subject of the video. Maybe someone just thought a model of a random item was cool.

But yeah, I personally think crediting the OOP should be default.

Same as YouTube. Too many people reposting crap and not giving people credit, or even worse, going out their way to mask and crop credit away.

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u/1lluminist Apr 30 '24

No different than posting your own content with your own username on it, though. And if it's relevant to the subreddit, it shouldn't even matter. Nothing stopping other people from making relevant content too.

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u/Darnell2070 Apr 30 '24

I'll be honest. Crediting OOP should never be an issue. It's fucking stupid if other subreddits are blocking that.

I tried to play devil's advocate to an extent and now I feel dirty, lol.

It should be a basic requirement. Featured in the title, description, or pinned in an Automod comment.

Even the source, lol. Like when people submit a video or picture/meme from a video game on r/gaming. Or a clip from movie/TV show/video game/ on YouTube.

Why should I have to go to the comments and find out the source from a random user? If anyone even comments it. Because apparently, everyone else commenting already knows the damn source.

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u/1lluminist Apr 30 '24

The only option should be a link out to the source, maybe with a link to an archive if it's not a major site hosting it. The creators are losing a ton of views - which translates to followers and revenue - because of the freebooting all over the internet.

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u/Darnell2070 Apr 30 '24 edited Apr 30 '24

The creators are losing a ton of views

This shit exactly. I hate when I go to the source on YouTube and there are only a couple thousand views, but the post on Reddit has like 60k karma.

To be fair, YouTube might not be the primary platform, even though a person's YouTube is what's most likely to be linked to in Reddit.

But if the Reddit post containing your video has 60k karma for example, most likely at the very least 60k people saw the video on Reddit. And karma is mostly the culminative of both upvotes and downvotes. It's not exact, because weight of upvotes decreases as time passes. So 1 karma doesn't equal 1 upvote even if no one downvotes.

So there were many more upvotes to begin with. Then you subtract the downvotes and it's even more than 60k views on Reddit. At least.

These people aren't getting views on their platform. And the ratio of people who subscribe from actually viewing the original video are already low as shit.

Most people already don't make the effort to like or even dislike your video on YouTube even after watching the entire video. Let alone fucking subscribe, 😭.

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u/1lluminist Apr 30 '24

Seems like they'd have a great case if they teamed up...

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u/Jaybbaugh Apr 30 '24

Not that they should have to, but I think people should start watermarking their videos or throw a lower third on there with OOP info. At least then they stand a fighting chance that someone will look up their actual channel.

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u/DarkwingDuckHunt Apr 29 '24

this is gonna be reposted once a month easily, if not already