Damn they really hate their users
You mean customers
The users aren’t customers. They’re the product they offer to their customers.
Their customers are investors and ad agencies.
… well to be fair nobody should have used those as long term storage solutions. But they still could have been nicer and more clearly announce their intention so people who care would have gotton a chance to save their stuff. - Just posting it in some changelog doesn’t sound very noticable.
This is Reddit we’re talking about they don’t do reasonable requests such as “advanced notice”
I wonder what their reason would be to do this? Are they just trying to get their users to dislike them more?
According to Reddit, “empowering the userbase”
Data storage/hosting isn’t free…
Text data on a compressed drive is so small. You have a modern server and accessing text files in a compressed drive is not noticeable performance hit. The compression ratio is massive for text and markup language files
Yes, text doesn’t take up much space, but decades of text can easily take up a lot of space, especially when you track things like edits.
Not to mention that this data isn’t in text files. It’s going to be in a database, so the number of records that need to be parsed will impact performance. How big that impact is depends on how they set the database up.
They’re definitely not deleting that data. Just hiding it.
And they sell it to the highest bidder to train their next LLM, which seems to be all the rage at the moment.
“Removes” or “hides them so that you think they’re gone and won’t try to delete them manually but they’re still keeping them for nefarious reasons that mere mortals cannot fathom”?
Edit: I noticed by sheer coincidence that my reply to the next comment was removed. I SERIOUSLY do not know why. I’m very confused and if I did anything wrong, I’m unable to learn from this without being told what I did wrong.
Well, request your data under GDPR and if they’re only hidden, they should still be included: https://www.reddit.com/settings/data-request
Removed by mod
Nope, they probably can’t. I don’t have any definitive answer, but I’d say yes, though our company doesn’t have any comments / private messages, so I kinda skipped those parts when we were implementing it.
Edit: I recently was playing with embeddings and GPT to feed it some data and I tested it specifically on GDPR, so this is a response from GPT AI that has access to the GDPR document:
Question: Using the right to be forgotten, do companies have to delete also my private messages and comments I made?
Answer: Yes, under the right to erasure or ‘right to be forgotten’, you have the right to obtain from the controller the erasure of personal data concerning you without undue delay. This includes any personal data you have made public, such as private messages and comments. The controller is obliged to erase this personal data and should also take reasonable steps to inform other controllers processing the personal data that you have requested the erasure of any links to, or copy or replication of, those personal data.
I live in the US and was able to request my data just fine. Although I don’t know if the results are any different
If “socialism” means holding companies accountable for their actions instead of letting them do whatever they want, sign me the fuck up.
Sounds like communism to request data for free
/s
Oh no all those chat requests from girls living just 3 miles from {location}!
Removed by mod
But they keep trying to restore my posts and comments. Once a week I login to check and there’s always something back.
Sounds like a toxic relationship
We’re migrating legacy chat to another platform but only chats since the beginning of 2023 Who the fuck considers less than a years worth of chat legacy. Smh. It’s sad to see reddit burn it’s foundation to ashes. Lemmy here we come
Whatever. Anyone still there is getting what they deserve. You know what a garbage company they are, you have nobody but yourself to blame. Most messages I ever got on there were from accounts pushing OnlyFans accounts.