• OurTragicUniverse@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Fuck. I really don’t like this.

    So many trauma and support subreddits get deeply personal and identifying posts and comments about horrific shit people (me included) lived through and were trying to cope with, which got deleted several hours after posting for privacy reasons.

    If this content gets revived by reddit, it puts a lot of vulnerable people in danger as it this type of ‘content’ is often harvested by users of other platforms who share these stories with huge audiences.

    • mrmanager@lemmy.today
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      1 year ago

      I don’t think they can just restore all comments and bypass the GDPR, that would be insane. It’s a very serious law in Europe.

    • S4nvers@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      I think you should definitely try, but I don’t think it’ll work. According to this stackexchange question they could argue that deleting your comments would break the cohesiveness of the discussion and make the available information incomplete.

      Art.17, 3a states that the right to be forgotten is not applicable if processing of the data is required to exercise freedom of information. So I don’t think posts or comments are affected by the GDPR as long as they don’t contain any information that would identify a user

  • Jeena@jemmy.jeena.net
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    1 year ago

    That is why you never edit anything in your database, only save a new version of it so you always can have a paper trail back with all the edits. Same with deleting, you just mark it as deleted. This data is worth a lot of money, they’d be stupid if they let the users destroy it.

    And yes it’s against the GDPR and so on, but which one of us will sue them?

  • BrooklynMan@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    I sanitized all of my comments before I deleted them. They’re welcome to bring them back. it’s all just a protest message anyway. But for those who didn’t, this is really shitty.

  • Ffkhrocks@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    So section 230 protects social media platforms regarding content users post.

    If they reinstate a user deleted post who owns it?

    Hoping this blows up in their faces as it’s a really shitty course of action to take.

  • jarfil@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    This is why I’m not deleting my Reddit account, it’s all the “power” we users have over what’s going on, they’ll have to ban me to stop editing my stuff… and then we’ll do the GDPR dance.

  • mephiska@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    I just deleted Apollo off my phone. I loved Apollo but I kept mindlessly opening it, I just can’t use Reddit anymore. I’m here now. I had a 17 year Reddit badge, but no more.

  • Seathru@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    This is the first morning I haven’t had any zombie comments pop back up on my account.

    Funny thing I noticed was if I tried to edit my comments to “fuck you piss baby spez”, it would log me out every few seconds and force me to log back in. But editing with random words worked fine. looks like they have some filtering set up to protect his ego lol.

    Edit: I take that back. Now there’s a bunch of year old, unedited, comments popped back up in there. Oh well, redact.dev goes brrrrrrr

    • mrmanager@lemmy.today
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      1 year ago

      More likely?

      No what’s more likely is that they want to show a lot of posts and comments in their statistics before they go public. They are trying to make the protests look like it’s nothing.

  • Tomthndsh@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    This will make Reddit worse. Some people will start to edit their comments to make them nonsense. Trust will erode further. Search will slowly become nonfunctional.
    From a users perspective, coming across a nonsensical thread (because comments have been edited), is much worse than see deleted comments. Not only does trust disappear people, but people become angry that the comments are outright random/bizarre/lies.