As some of you may know, recently Reddit started using some sort of bot or LLM called Anti-Evil Operations (AEO) to start rummaging through comments and ban users unilaterally. You've probably noticed it when you've gone through a post and found a long list of removals saying "[ Removed by Reddit ]". That's the AEO bot. My own personal experience with that bot is that the ban reasons can be rather assinine.
Case in point, earlier this year I got 1-week Reddit ban. This was in /r/ShittyLifeProTips where there was a post proposing a silly method for dealing with drivers who park in handicapped spots. My comment was very short and simply said to make a piss disc (the usual SLPT joke answer) and drop it through the car window. That was the entire comment. This got me a Reddit-wide ban for Rule 1: promoting violence. My appeal was declined. I get it, it's a dumb joke, but that's just what they do there.
I am now on another 1-week ban for a similar kind of silly joke that AEO took too seriously. I'm not even going to bother appealing because it's clear they've taken humans out of the loop and just have LLMs processing the user side of things.
Oddly enough I don't have any problems with individual subreddits or moderators. Most of them, except for a handful of power tripping individuals on the big subreddits, do a rather thankless job keeping their communities running. Reddit's AEO bots are where the problem is.
Just Googling around it appears this has come up among some of the moderators: 1, 2, 3, 4, etc.
Reddit is not only getting aggressive in deleting legitimate users (as per the other posts people have made) but are also trying to completely automate sitewide moderation. It appears they're willing to take a tremendous amount of collateral damage to do this. LLM based tools don't maintain understandings of a community's evolving culture and are unable to gauge intent and tone. Friendly joking "trash talk" between gets flagged as toxicity, satirical content mocking bigotry gets flagged, ironically, as bigotry, and so forth. They'll definitely get rid of the toxic content like they want, but at the expense of killing communities and driving off old timers.
Hopefully this is a case study for Lemmy to not start rolling out those tools here. For the time being I'm going to look around and use my ban period to get more familiar with Lemmy. I was surprised that my Lemmy front page had a lot more fresh content than I remember last time... that's a good sign, and it makes me wonder if a slow exodus is already underway. Reddit's overaggressive moderation seems to be helping it along.
I wonder if anyone else has stories about ridiculous reasons for getting flagged by the AEO bot.
I was banned out of the blue, even though I just posted in tech and fandom subs, and never in 10 years had an encounter with a mod. So there's definitely something wrong with the tool they're using.
And I've seen those comment threads you mention. It'll be a normal, friendly conversation with a random "[ removed by reddit ]" in the middle. I started joking to myself whenever I see one of those, that there was someone saying something really awful in that comment despite the rest of the conversation flowing completely peacefully (sometimes including replies like "I totally agree!").
I've even found posts in tech subs after doing a web search, where the cached result looks like an issue I'm having, but when I load the post it's "[removed by reddit]" and there's no drama or anything to indicate that the removal made any sense.