One of the things platforms use to keep us coming back and investing more of our time in building their site for them, is Internet Points. They don’t do anything, but we still crave them.
On Reddit, these Internet Points are, of course, called “karma”
In moving on from Reddit, I’m burning over 80k karma.
It feels fine. I mean, it has no real value, and bots can scrounge up that amount of karma in an afternoon, but it still represents a sizable time investment.
How much are you burning, and how do you feel about it?
About 90k. It’s fine. I care less about the karma then I do about loosing the community’s, but they were going downhill for a long time anyway.
200k+ comment karma, from 75,000 comments. I’ve run PowerDeleteSuite, but it hasn’t quite got everything. I think I need to use the GDPR request csv files to get the comments that don’t display in the profile, but I’m looking for something that will automate this.
I’ll be filing a GDPR right-to-be-forgotten request, so Reddit has to do it for me.
Make sure you do a GDPR data request first. The csv files contain a lot of stuff (although they don’t contain any associated accounts they believe you have), in particular there are links to every comment. Your profile doesn’t show every single comment you’ve ever made, and if you just delete your account they will delete the user but leave the comments up.
So you have to do it carefully. PowerDeleteSuite is good, however as I say it only has access to what’s on your profile - many older comments with lower karma will be missed.
It should be straightforward to use the csv files to extract the links and edit + delete from there, in the same way that PSD does it from the profile, but I’m still looking for something that does that.
Yep, I’ve already requested that, and when it arrives I’ll likely build something to do it manually if they don’t comply properly with my request to be forgotten. I’d take them to court over it, but meh, I don’t have the energy.
I don’t think it would be a “take them to court” job - in particular you’d struggle to prove actual damages. However you most definitely can report them to your country’s Information Commissioner’s Office, then leave the matter with them.
I kind of feel like they’ll just brush it under the rug, though. But really that is the correct course of action.
I feel manipulated by the karma. It has no value and yet I care when i get downvoted. It’s a huge warning sign to get off reddit and into a healthier community.
I had like 20000 karma on some previous reddit account i deleted a few years back. Current one has 3000 karma or so. Because I post a lot, and I wrote things people agree with usually. But it’s a echo chamber, and once I start to limit myself to writing things that are “safe” from a karma point of view, I’m literally just supporting the entire karma system.
It’s something very Chinese about these points. They have this social system where citizens have a score, and if they get too low, they can’t get loans and whatnot. Pretty much what the show black mirror was showing, and China now has it.
Are you questioning The Party, comorade?
35k karma, 11.5yrs.
I agree, though I don’t think we should limit this discussion to ‘1984-with-Chinese-characteristics’, lest we ignore the similar ways that western countries are sliding into authoritarianism. We have a vast body of literature warning us about these dystopic futures awaiting us, so it’ll be only us to blame if we don’t heed their warnings.
I have ~5100 karma, I’ve never really cared about the total karma amount but it is fun to see a comment or post be upvoted. They feel like social points and that makes me think of “that” episode of Black Mirror, and as @mrmanager@lemmy.today said, China has implemented that. It’s crazy.
But as I always say, in the end, the people have the power. Always.
Yep, and we kinda get that same sort of dopamine hit here, just not the global karma, because there is no central place to collect global points!
I think “local” karma makes more sense and I’d much rather have a point system than get hundreds of comments saying “I agree” because that’s annoying af.
Ironically, I agree!
Not my account, but my bot, thebenshapirobot, just reached 600,000 karma in about a year and a half. I was always hoping it’d get to a million karma while trolling Ben Shapiro. The bot is currently off as part of the blackout, and frankly I have no idea if the API changes will affect it because I haven’t bothered to read them.
360k and ten years.
Such a waste of time. This was what I needed to make healthier choices. Less time spent scrolling, less time commenting. Lemmy is my methodone right now.
107k. But what really matters to me are the thanks I got from people I helped out with book recommendations.
Do you know of any communities/instances for that yet?
Around 700 karma. Let it burn, we should abolish karma forever since it only promotes echo chambers and stiffles actual discussion.
170k, I don’t mind at all though. I only got it because I thought it was funny to have a big number.
27k here, not terribly worried about it honestly.
Like a few thousand across five accounts? I had closer to 10k on an old account that I deleted entirely a few years ago, after redacting all my comments. Always been more of a lurker than an active user.
99,8k Karma. I would’ve loved the 100k but in the end I don’t really care The thing I will miss the most though is the shitposting from r/anarchychess
347k. I care about it as much as any imaginary number you can make go higher in a game - once you lose interest in the game, the numbers don’t matter any more.
I am still a bit dumbfounded as to why people care about an arbitrary number.
I looked it up now and apparently it is over 400000. But it still doesn’t do anything right?
It makes you a better human being. Compared to my sad 330k.
No. It doesn’t do anything and doesn’t mean anything, at all.
Honestly, I think karma, points, upvotes and the like should all be invisible. It’s functionality for bringing specific posts or comments to the top is useful, but the number itself serves no purpose being displayed to the user.