Reddit
moderator pushed for RT ban 'simply because it's Kremlin'
The
reason RT.com was banned on Reddit’s /r/news section may not be
spam or vote manipulation, as was stated officially, but “simply
because it’s Kremlin.” This was revealed by a user from his
discussion with one of the subreddit’s moderators.
RT,
1
September, 2013
RT.com
was banned from /r/news this Thursday on accusations of “spam
and vote manipulation”, with
no evidence of the violations being presented by the moderators, who
said that this information was only for “internal”
use.
The
move caused uproar among the reddit users as the drama was then taken
to another subforum, /r/worldnews, where several things were
eventually revealed.
Redditor BipolarBear0, who is listed as one of the moderators for the /r/news section, said that no “vote manipulation” ever took place, and that forum's leading moderator douglasmacarthur, who was behind the ban, made “an honest” mistake by making such announcement.
When another user asked him to clarify if the ban was explained by “just spam of RT.com links,” the moderator’s answer was: “Yeah.”
Responding
to Michael Reed, co-founder of the Restore the Fourth movement, in
another thread, BipolarBear0 stressed that he wasn’t involved in
the current decision to ban RT.com, but added that he had in general
been advocating the move: “Simply
because… It’s the Kremlin.”
Form
the start, RT has denounced the claims of both spamming and vote
manipulation as absurd, viewing the sanctions on its website as an
act of censorship by the /r/news moderators.
This
stance was shared by a large number of redditors, with even RT’s
usual critics, saying that banning a domain without providing any
proof is unjustified.
Many users refused to believe that
the violations were committed as it’s not moderators, but
administrators, who deal with spamming issues, and accused /r/news of
being prejudice towards RT.
The others found the timing for the
ban suspicious as it coincided with the escalation of events around
Syria in anticipation of a US announcement of military intervention
in the Middle Eastern country.
Some redditors demanded a ban of
douglasmacarthur himself, while a number announced that their
unsubbing from /r/news as they have lost trust in the section.
The
moderators weren’t prepared for such an outcry for the users, who
flooded the thread with angry comments, and could only reply with
more censorship.
It later appeared that nearly all of the 985
comments posted in the thread had been deleted, with only a handful
remaining visible on the site.
RT
long on douglasmacarthur’s ban list
In
his post from half a year ago, douglasmacarthur suggested banning a
number of domains from the /r/news subreddit, including RT –
alongside the Huffington Post, Gizmodo, Gawker, Mashabe, the Raw
Story and others.
The
move was explained by his desire to turn /r/news “into
the first large news-related subreddit largely free of the alarmism,
bias, editorialization, etc.”
It's
noteworthy that after the subject of douglasmacarthur’s ‘media
ban list’ was brought up in RT’s previous
story
on the issue, moderators have wiped
the old discussion
clean of all comments and the original post, leaving only the
headline. The archived
copy of the censored thread
however can still be found online.
“That
a site is listed doesn't mean we're accusing it of being a bad site,
or even that it isn't a trustworthy news-related organization. It
merely means that much of the content on its website isn't
appropriate for the specific purpose of this subreddit, which is to
gather factual news content,”
the moderator wrote in the opening post.
It’s
worth noting that RT.com was not singled out in any other way, apart
from being on the list. The moderator proposed to ban it as according
to him, RT.com fell in the same category as the Daily Mail for providing “misleading/sensationalist/unreliable”
content. Others, like the Huffington Post, Gawker and the Raw Story
were labeled “Blog Spam.”
Some
users were outraged by the intended ban and totally decried it, with
douglasmacarthur being forced to “put
this project on hold until further notice.”
'Douglasmacarthur
caused fall of Restore the Fourth'
Meanwhile,
the Restore the Fourth movement co-founder, Michael Reed, has blamed
douglasmacarthur of bringing disorder into the organization, casting
some light on the /r/news moderator as a personality.
According
to Reed, whose Reddit nickname is RTFMicheal, after douglasmacarthur
was granted operator rights at the organization’s IRC channel, he
“constantly looked to gain
access to additional accounts.”
Reddit
is one of the leading social networks. It works by allowing users to
submit links from around the Internet, which other users then vote
on. The American website, which was founded by Steve Huffman and
Alexis Ohanian in 2005, has 2.5 million registered users, called the
“redditors,” and nearly 70 million unique visitors every month.
On
one occasion, he wanted to respond to a Mashable website interview
from the official press inbox and when his request was denied, the
threats of sabotage followed.
“He
threatened that if he did not gain access, he would tell Mashable and
other reporters not to do an article,”
RTFMicheal wrote. “This
threat set off alarms; anyone that genuinely cared about our cause
would not threaten such a thing, especially over something as simple
as access to an email.”
The /r/news moderator refused to “shed
his veil of anonymity”
as he used TOR software, a hosted phone number and to share
information about himself, Reed wrote.
After he “connected
the dots,”
Reed addressed the movement’s core leadership to remove
douglasmacarthur from his position, but instead was asked to leave
himself – and hasn’t been connected with Restore the Fourth for
the last two months.
In his Reddit post,
RTFMicheal said that the douglasmacarthur is responsible for “causing
the fall of /r/RestoretheFourth,”
but in his letter to RT on Saturday he stressed that now “the
movement seems to be back on the right track, but has certainly lost
a large amount of momentum.”
Restore the Fourth is a grassroots US organization, which sees
its aims in strengthening the Fourth Amendment to the US Constitution
and putting an end to the surveillance programs that violate it.
The
movement originated on Reddit several days after former NSA
contractor, Edward Snowden, started his leaks on the US government’s
secret surveillance programs
Censoring the internet is unfair for those who use it responsibly. As a subscriber of an Australian broadband service provider, I believe the government should leave the internet alone.
ReplyDeleteCouldn't agree more!
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