That site has the most biased moderation I have seen on any website.
Yeah, it's out of control.
That site has the most biased moderation I have seen on any website.
Ya think?That site has the most biased moderation I have seen on any website.
Hey there. Welcome back.Ya think?
That site has the most biased moderation I have seen on any website.
They axed that vid? A few of the piggies did seem to suffer. MAybe it was the follow up rifle extermination to end their pain. Y'know, cuz GUNS!! the other intolerable behavior on ADVwokerider...
we really need a facepalm emoji. We could use the term :advrdr to call it.
That's possibly the lamest reason for a ban I've ever seen on any forum.
That site has the most biased moderation I have seen on any website.
At least two 'Woke' mods and two others setting it to military PC standards.Ya think?
At least two 'Woke' mods and two others setting it to military PC standards.
Thats where the site is going now.
No more crude, no off topic.
If you all haven't noticed, the Basement rules have been tweaked as well.
I 100% understand wantinng to keep Upstairs clean, but making the Basement a PG13 is bullshit and betrays 2 decades of raucous fun and THE VERY REASON the place was created...since the BMW forums were what ADV is being turned into.
They?They axed that vid?
Relevant.
https://www.nytimes.com/2015/07/26/magazine/when-the-internets-moderators-are-anything-but.html
https://archive.is/z8zI6
"The moderator class has become so detached from its mediating role at Reddit that it no longer functions as a means of creating a harmonious community, let alone a profitable business. It has become an end in itself — a sort of moderatocracy in which the underlying logic of moderation has been turned on its head"
"History shows that things end poorly for companies that rely too heavily on moderatocracies. Probably the closest analogy to Reddit is AOL, which in the 1990s built a corps of thousands of volunteer ‘‘community leaders’’ to moderate its chat rooms and forums. Those community leaders eventually revolted, too; some sued for back pay, and AOL was forced to settle for a reported $15 million in 2010. The tension is intrinsic: Unpaid moderators will always feel the company does not appreciate them enough for the free labor they donate. Eventually, the company will change in a way that upsets the moderators. A tiny spark can ignite the built-up resentment."