> The default subreddits are ultra-useless, ultra-high noise
I have a really, really, really hard time believing that the ultra-uselessness of the default subreddits is anything other than a _deliberate_ attempt on the part of the reddit admins to make them that way.
Or, to be more direct - I do not believe at _all_ that the political slant of reddit's main subs is organic.
It definitely is manipulated and the evidence is there if you start digging into post histories. Normal people don't go posting the exact same article of political fodder to three dozen subreddits a day. Thats a bot trying to establish a narrative in a community.
Nah, that makes no sense to me. Why would they do that on purpose?
I think this one is pretty Occam's Razor-friendly. Any high volume free-for-all discussion (meatspace or online) is guaranteed to devolve into a useless cacophony.
Or, to be more direct - I do not believe at _all_
that the political slant of reddit's main subs is organic.
Always remember, they make up the rules for whats a default sub and how posts are weighted on the front page. This is a table they have set themselves.
>Or, to be more direct - I do not believe at _all_ that the political slant of reddit's main subs is organic.
The day after election day 2016 in the US, it was actually possible to post non-leftist comments/articles in /r/politics. Basically, the mods and bot owners hadn't been given their new marching orders, and didn't know what to do.
The default subreddits are ultra-useless, ultra-high noise. Quality of discussion is on par with YouTube comments (ie abyssmal)
A lot of the individual, smaller, focused subreddits are extremely valuable. But, nobody would know it at first glance.