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Tag: Reddit

  • Ashley Madison Hack Might Be a Hoax?

    Ashley Madison Hack Might Be a Hoax?

    The Ashley Madison hack has put the fear into some people who believed that the company’s “have an affair” offer was safe from prying eyes. When hackers claimed they had collected info on thousands of Ashley Madison subscribers, people scrambled to think up excuses, cover their tails, and figure out how to combat the impending fights with spouses.

    Hackers released two names as proof that they had the list they threatened to have. One was an American from Massachusetts, the other was Canadian, from Mississauga.

    “Sometimes, you’re just curious, looking for friends,” the Mississauga man told the Toronto Sun when asked about his Ashley Madison activity, “but then it doesn’t necessarily appeal to you. I haven’t been on the site in a long, long time. It is a stupid (website). You go just to see what is out there. It was pretty much a waste of time … to join.”

    The American has not spoken to the press about his Ashley Madison account.

    So far, only two names have been verified. The rest are on a supposed list. One Christian website in French published a partial list of 5,000 names said to be culled from the larger list.

    However, as one commenter on Reddit pointed out, something is amiss with that list.

    “I will say that I googled some of the less common names (or those I perceived to be more unique). Hardly any of the search results turned up actual people. I would think that those digitally savvy enough to go looking for an affair on a website would also likely have a Facebook account, twitter, instagram, LinkedIn, etc. 8 out of 10 turned up only around 4 pages of results, with many of them being the names of people deceased LONG ago.”

    Now folks are starting to wonder if these Ashley Madison hackers may have just gotten their hands on two names, released those as “proof” they had more, and put the fear into many people. Maybe there isn’t actually anything to worry about?

  • Ashley Madison Victims Are Discussing How To Handle Fallout

    Ashley Madison Victims Are Discussing How To Handle Fallout

    Ashley Madison users are nervous. When the famous infidelity website — with the motto “Life Is Short. Have An Affair” — was reportedly hacked. Thousands upon thousands of people had a very bad day. Questions were racing around the Internet, this time as anonymously as possible.

    What if my spouse finds out I had an Ashley Madison account, even if I never did anything else?

    What was hacked? Credit card info? Messages passed back and forth on the site? Just user names?

    Even people who have never used Ashley Madison at all were wondering what the hack might portend for society,

    What could be done with the data that was taken? Could it be used to compromise people in sensitive positions?

    The same sort of questions that the Ashley Madison hack raised were floated when Adult Friend Finder was hit back in May.

    While there have been lots of news stories about the hack of Ashley Madison, there have not been many suggestions for persons fearing for their privacy. The usual topics about watching out for phishing schemes and such — useful for any data breach — are common.

    But what if you know your life would be completely turned upside-down if your membership in Ashley Madison were found out? What suggestions are out there for you? Indeed, many seem to be snickering at the “just desserts” people who took Ashley Madison up on its offer are being threatened with getting.

    So these guys had to band together, gather what info they could, and come up with a plan. To that end, there was a “mega thread” started on Reddit, compiling as many of the smaller discussions that had sprung up as they could. Some of the observations and suggestions passed in those comments may prove to be useful or helpful to those worried about the Ashley Madison hack.

    One commenter heavily encouraged joining a class action suit against Avid, owners of Ashley Madison.

    I chatted with a great internet privacy lawyer, nationally known, who is taking my case. Engaging her Monday, so she will be in contact directly with AM corporate and legal. Fuck their customer service. I am going to sue the living sh*! out of Avid. This makes me feel alot better. I assume you all are in on this class action? I kid not, this is for real. This is the only power that we, the VICTIMS, have in this situation.

    Another suggested that, if the worst happens, everyone maintain a front of denying it still.

    Everyone needs to stop sweating. Even if it comes out there will be 1 and 10 people in North America on it. Lie. You’ve been lying all along and deny til the very end. Say the list is fake and trolls are using it for extortion. The list was manufactured from social media and your credit card number was stolen and you didn’t notice. Play this shit off til the very end. If you weren’t physically caught cheating it’s pretty hard to prove. Even your pictures can be stolen from social media. Unless of course messages come out and they are personal. Then you’re fucked. But until then enjoy everyday not being caught.

    But one of the most insightful responses to the Ashley Madison hack was the idea that fake name lists should be put out, including peppering such lists with viruses.

    The only way to stem the spread through normies, is if fake lists with malware/viruses are distributed. This will make most hesitate.

    If a legitimate list exists, having the static and overlap of many fake lists might mitigate the damage, make it deniable. If even viewing a list is seen as dangerous because of virus booby traps, then maybe few would even look at the lists.

  • Arnold Schwarzenegger Note to Fan with Dementia Goes Viral [Pic]

    Arnold Schwarzenegger Note to Fan with Dementia Goes Viral [Pic]

    Arnold Schwarzenegger is bringing smiles to faces all around. The Original Terminator was tagged in a recent Reddit post by a fan, who was then shocked and elated that his idol not only answered him back, but sent along a hand-written note for the man’s father.

    Terminator 2 was the first movie I saw with my dad in a movie theater,” the poster explained. “From then on we saw a bunch of movies together along the years, including all the terminator movies until now, it was our franchise. We both loved it and shared some great conversations with those movies. My dad loved Arnold’s catchphrase “I’ll be back” and he would just rewind it every time. I have only my dad to thank for my love for movies, it’s one of those things we always shared together.”

    The post went on to explain how the man’s father has since developed dementia, and does not respond much to almost anything. That is, until he and his son went to see Arnold Schwarzenegger in the new Terminator: Genisys film.

    During the whole movie I was actually surprised to see my dad enjoying it, not because it was this amazing film we never seen before but because for MONTHS he hasn’t smile, he used to be a very happy man and always had a big smile on his face. I know it may sound dumb but it felt like a miracle!

    “I looked at my dad and he has this huge smile on his face when he saw Arnold smiling…that’s when I lost it and began to cry (out of joy), I haven’t seen that genuine smile for so long. It was literally the best birthday present I could ever get.”

    Then came the biggest surprise. Schwarzenegger responded to the man’s Reddit post with:

    “Wow. I’m in Korea on a whirlwind tour but you stopped me in my tracks. This is so touching. Thank you for sharing. I’d like to say ‘this is why I do this’ but you should know it was you who made your father smile. It was your presence and caring. Happy birthday, you’ve got a lot of wisdom for 30 years.”

    What is more, Schwarzenegger scrawled a handwritten note to the man’s father, apparently with a stylus on a tablet, and posted it for the man to see. The note read:

    “I am honored that my silly smile in Terminator made you smile, but I hope you find real joy and strength in what a wonderful child you have brought into the world and raised.”

    Many other Redditors also sent encouraging messages along to the man and his father. The response came back:

    “Wow, thank you all for your kind responses. I shared this with my whole family including my dad’s brothers. Everyone here, including Arnold have made a family very happy.”

  • Popular Social Media Sites Lean On Email For User Engagement

    Popular Social Media Sites Lean On Email For User Engagement

    Remember the days when it wasn’t uncommon to read an article speculating about whether or not social media would kill email? In fact, if you count the increasingly popular business communication tool Slack, it’s still a subject that comes up.

    These days, however, it seems like largely social-oriented services are utilizing email more than ever.

    A couple weeks ago, stories circulated about new email effort from Instagram. It has a new email digest called “Highlights” that displays several posts from people the user follows in an attempt to drive some more engagement.

    “Some people will surely bristle at the idea of receiving more email, especially one’s they didn’t explicitly sign up for,” wrote TechCrunch’s Josh Constine. “However, Highlights could solve an issue common amongst maturing social networks that show a live, reverse chronological feed of posts. It impacts networks like Instagram and Twitter, but not relevancy-sorted streams like Facebook’s.”

    He did note, however, that even Facebook has tested various re-engagement tools including email.

    Twitter has sent users emails about activity from their networks for a long time, and this is only one of many email options users can choose whether or not they wish to receive.

    Even reddit recently launched a weekly email newsletter aimed at showcasing some of its top content to more casual users. On Product Hunt, Product manager Heath Black said this about reddit’s reasoning for getting into email after all these years:

    First of all, we know that a lot of people interact with reddit content across the web on a daily basis. They love the content, but don’t necessarily understand that concept of reddit itself. This helps us build some context for those two things for new users, reddit lurkers, and folks that just can’t spend all day on the site.

    Secondly, as the site continues to grow, and the amount of content submitted grows with it, finding good content can be incredibly difficult. Discovery is a hard problem to solve, and much of the best content can be found in some of the smallest corners of reddit. A weekly digest gives us the ability to call out those good content creators, no matter where they reside on reddit.

    Third, since reddit content blows up pretty often, we want to make sure that the creators of that content are given the credit they deserve. Many publishers that use their content don’t credit at all and it absolutely pisses our users off. We want reddit users to know that we love them and the creative things they do.

    StumbleUpon has also been using email to drive engagement. Earlier this year, we had a chat with Director of Marketing Anne Gherini to learn more about its strategy. She talked about running tests to gauge what content its users want to see and how its emails feature dynamic content generated by its personalization algorithm.

    “StumbeUpon is in essence an entertainment company. What we are finding is that entertainment is judged by emotion and that emotion can sometimes be better determined by a human over just an algorithm,” she told us at the time. “Our approach to CRM is simple. It is a privilege to be able to be in a user’s inbox or to pop up on their newsfeed. We don’t take this privilege lightly, so we are dedicated to delivering the right mix of content to the right users at the right time. Finding this balance involves in-depth testing and proper data-mining. Segmentation, personalization and a fantastic CRM team are making this happen at SU. We are already seeing the results and there are many more changes and improvements in the pipeline.”

    “The weekly recommendation emails have had the highest engagement and our continuous optimization of these emails has enabled us to keep increasing our KPIs,” she said, adding that they were still looking at building out additional email programs based on users’ usage patterns.

    In the days when the desktop ruled, email overload was a legitimate concern. Nobody enjoys sitting down at their desk and sorting through an inbox full of messages, but the rise of the smartphone has changed our email habits. It’s basically just another notification you get throughout the day, which you can easily swipe away for later, delete, or open and engage with at your leisure. This is likely why email is such an attractive way for social networks to re-engage users.

    Maybe you don’t have time to scroll through reddit, but you might want to take a quick glance at some top stories. Maybe you it’s been a while since you fired up the StumbleUpon app and thumbed through a bunch of pages from around the web, but if you see some interesting stuff from categories that you’re specifically into, pushed right to your inbox, well, maybe you won’t mind pausing to take a look.

    According to Experian’s Q1 Email Benchmark report, 51% of total opens occurred on a mobile phone or tablet during the quarter. The majority of email opens ocurred on mobile phones or tablets for all industies except publishers and business products and services. The majority of total clicks occurred on mobile phones or tablets for media and entertainment (56%) and multi-channel retailers (51%).

    Image via Thinkstock

  • Reddit Unveils New Anti-Harassment Policy, But What Does It Actually Do?

    Reddit Unveils New Anti-Harassment Policy, But What Does It Actually Do?

    Reddit, a site that’s basically run by volunteer moderators with minimal tinkering from the higher-ups, says it’s going to get more serious about dealing with harassment.

    “We have been looking closely at the conversations on reddit and at personal safety. We’ve always encouraged freedom of expression by having a mostly hands-off approach to content shared on our site. Volunteer moderators determine and uphold rules for content in their subreddits, and we have stepped in when we see threats to our values of privacy and safety,” says the reddit team in a recent post.

    “In the past 10 years we’ve seen how these policies have fostered cool and amazing conversations on reddit. We’ve seen new types of conversations as AMAs and /r/askscience and /r/askhistorians developed. We’ve seen more and more organic content as part of conversations after the introduction of self-posts. We’ve also seen the scope and scale of discussions explode.

    “Unfortunately, not all the changes on reddit have been positive. We’ve seen many conversations devolve into attacks against individuals. We share redditors’ frustration with these interactions. We are also seeing more harassment and different types of harassment as people’s use of the Internet and the information available on the Internet evolve over time. For example, some users are harassing people across platforms and posting links on reddit to private information on other sites.”

    In response to this, and a survey which, according to reddit, proves that users think harassment is a big problem, reddit is finally putting into words what constitutes harassment – at least in its eyes.

    This is how harassment is now defined in reddit’s terms:

    Systematic and/or continued actions to torment or demean someone in a way that would make a reasonable person (1) conclude that reddit is not a safe platform to express their ideas or participate in the conversation, or (2) fear for their safety or the safety of those around them.

    As with Twitter and other social media networks that have been dealing with how to battle online harassment, reddit relies on self-reporting. if you see harassment taking place, either against you or another user, you are tasked with reporting it to reddit.

    What this means, practically, is that “when someone reports harassment we will investigate thoroughly rather that leaving it to moderators and respond based on the nature of the harassment,” according to reddit.

    Reddit’s always been a hard one to figure out. For a site that’s always espoused free speech as a fundamental principle, it’s clear that the admins are conflicted about what that actually means. Why are some subreddits banned while other, seemingly similar or more offensive subreddits allowed to exist? Why is r/niggers banned while r/greatapes and r/coontown are up and running, for instance? Where’s the line between simply offensive and harassment?

    As you would expect, some redditors are none too thrilled about this announcement, as they feel it lays the groundwork to ban subreddits like r/fatpeoplehate:

    I hope we aren’t trying to become Tumblr. The internet isn’t a safe space. It never has been and hopefully never will be – safe is boring, heavily regulated and Brave New Worldish.

    I don’t like personal attacks either – but this appears to be your grounds to ban subs like /r/fatpeoplehate and /r/fatlogic or /r/CandidFashionPolice .

    You truly didn’t clarify what actions you plan to take to stop harassment. Its either a toothless policy OR a policy absent clear standards/transparency. . .

    “You know what inspired reddit? Speakers Corner’s in London,” says reddit co-founder Alexis Ohanian in response to that. I studied abroad in London for a semester and it really inspired me (I came back States-side and started a phpbb forum and then a year later Steve and I made reddit). It’s a place where literally anyone can get on a soapbox and talk about what matters to them. I listened to Iraqis (2003) argue for AND against the Iraq war, heard a really hateful speech by the Nation of Islam, was moved by a woman talking about the need for better mental health treatment in the UK, watched a man argue for Gay Rights standing across from a VERY conservative christian telling him he’d burn in hell. reddit should be a place where anyone can pull up their soapbox and speak their mind, or have a discussion and maybe learn something new and even challenging or uncomfortable, but right now redditors are telling us they sometimes encounter users who use the system to harass them and that’s a problem.”

    Another user thinks everything should be left to the mods:

    Don’t ‘keep everyone safe’. This isn’t Facebook, reddit is a free speech platform and I don’t think that the omniscient mods like /u/kn0thing should be able to dictate to subreddits how they should handle their community. Censorship should be the subreddit’s decision. If we feel that some sub’s should be silenced then we are no better than they are.

    “This is not what we’re proposing. We made reddit so that as many people as possible could speak as freely as possible — when our userbase is telling us that harassment is a huge problem for them and it’s effectively silencing or keeping people off the site, it’s a problem we need to address,” responds Ohanian.

    Reddit’s higher-ups have stepped in and banned subreddits before. But Reddit doesn’t really have a lot of rules. No harassing other users now joins no spam, no vote manipulation, no posting of personal info, no child porn, no revenge porn, and no messing with the site itself as the only rules. This is a place where r/sexyabortions, r/picsofdeadkids, r/cutefemalecorpses, and r/gasthekikes are allowed to thrive.

    Sure, there will be plenty of debate on what constitutes harassment. For instance, the aforementioned r/fatpeoplehate. If users aren’t specifically targeting other users or dealing in personal information, is it ok?

    We’ll see how this one plays out. If reddit starts banning a bunch of controversial subreddits because of “increased reports of harassment” or something, then this might be a bigger story. But even reddit says this shouldn’t really affect anything:

    “This change will have no immediately noticeable impact on more than 99.99% of our users. It is specifically designed to prevent attacks against people, not ideas. It is our challenge to balance free expression of ideas with privacy and safety as we seek to maintain and improve the quality and range of discourse on reddit.”

    Some will see this as a PR move from a site that’s continually admonished for being a lawless wasteland, yet has no real intentions of doing anything to reign itself in. Some will see this as a much-needed clarification on how reddit plans to curb rampant harassment. Some will see it as an assault on free speech. Some won’t see it at all.

    If you want to debate it on reddit, you can.

    Image via Blake Patterson, Flickr Creative Commons

  • Caroll Spinney: Big Bird Shares Heartbreaking Story During Reddit AMA

    Caroll Spinney: Big Bird Shares Heartbreaking Story During Reddit AMA

    Caroll Spinney, a man who’s played a big part of many kids’ lives, recently shared one of the most heartbreaking stories you’ll read on the internet.

    For the last 46 years, Spinney has made Big Bird and Oscar the Grouch come alive on Sesame Street. He sat down this week for a reddit AMA, in which a users asked him what has been his most meaningful interaction with a child.

    Grab your tissues:

    Okay, here’s one.

    This is a very sad story, but it’s real.

    I got a letter from a fan who said his little boy, who was 5 years old, his name was Joey, he was dying of cancer.

    And he was so ill, the little boy knew he was dying.

    So the man, in his letter, asked if I would call the little boy. He said the only thing that cheered him at all in his fading state was to see Big Bird on television.

    So once in a while, he wouldn’t see Big Bird on some days, because he wasn’t necessarily in every show. So he asked could I telephone him, and talk to the boy, tell him what a good boy he’s been.

    So I took a while to look up a phone, because this was before cell phones. And they got a long cord to bring a phone to the boy.

    And I had Big Bird say “Hello! Hello Joey! It’s me, Big Bird!”

    So he said “Is it really you, Big Bird?”

    “Yes, it is.”

    I chatted a while with him, about ten minutes, and he said “I’m glad you’re my friend Big Bird.”

    And I said “I’d better let you go now.”

    He said “Thank you for calling me Big Bird. You’re my friend. You make me happy.”

    And it turns out that his father and mother were sitting with him when the phone call came. And he was very, very ill that day.

    And they called the parents in, because they weren’t sure how long he’d last.

    And so his father wrote to me right away, and said “Thank you, thank you” – he hadn’t seen him smile since October, and this was in March – and when the phone was hung up, he said “Big Bird called me! He’s my friend.”

    And he closed his eyes. And he passed away.

    And I could see that what I say to children can be very important.

    And he said “We haven’t seen our little boy smile in MONTHS. He smiled, as he passed away. It was a gift to us. Thank you.”

    Spinney also shared his thoughts on Big Bird’s “controversial” appearance on Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood.

    Well, see – other people make arguments in favor of us being totally honest, that does not fit with my feeling of the joy of being a little child. I’ve seen a child discover me – we thought we were alone in a park, filming a scene outdoors on some great stretches of rock, we had to do a shot for a China film – and a little boy came along, and he saw me take Big Bird off! And he screamed, and cried, and I said “Quick!” – he looked so funny with his little legs, running away, crying and crying – and I chased after him, with the costume back on- and I said “Little boy, I’m okay” and he said “I thought that man was hurting you, Big Bird.”

    When children see that Big Bird – Mr. Rogers wanted me to lift the puppet which is so big I have to get inside, off – it’s a series of hoops that create the shape of Big Bird, and then there’s netting and feathers, they’re all real feathers so he looks nice and real – we found out that children would NOT have liked seeing Big Bird take it off on Mr. Rogers. I said “I’m sorry, I can’t do that!” Jim Henson didn’t want me to do it either.

    So we made a compromise with Mr. Rogers.

    And that was that I would just go to the Make-Believe Land, and say “OK, this is Make-Believe” and have some other puppeteers – a good friend of mine, Bob Brown, would show how HIS puppets worked – little marionettes on strings – they don’t look so real anyway, like Big Bird did to little kids.

    We’re not trying to fool them, we’re just trying to entertain them, and let them know that their friend Big Bird is not just a man in a giant suit.

    Check out the whole AMA here. It’s worth your time.

    Image via Neil Grabowsky, Wikimedia Commons

  • Anna Faris and Peter Quill Get Love from Chris Pratt on Reddit

    Anna Faris and Peter Quill Get Love from Chris Pratt on Reddit

    Anna Faris and husband Chris Prat are a darling couple in Hollywood right now. While Anan Faris is enjoying her own run of success alongside Allison Janney in the sitcom Mom, it is her husband who is blowing up on the big screen lately with Guardians of the Galaxy and Jurassic World.

    Chris Pratt and Anna Faris may work so much that you wonder how they ever have time to be a real couple. But When given a chance to talk to fans about his Anna Faris, her husband was all glowing comments.

    Pratt did a Reddit AMA recently, and the topic of his wife came up. A reader asked about Anna Faris:

    What drew you two together? Is there some cute story in which you guys fell in love? Is Anna a great wife/mom?

    Pratt’s reply about Anna Faris was one for the ages.

    Anna and I are meant to be together. Our relationship has made me believe in divine intervention and destiny, just as much as my crazy career and the way I fell into this life. She and I grew up 20 minutes away from each other but never met until we met in LA. We both got our start in horror spoofs. We both did an animated movie for Phil Lord and Chris Miller. We both made our careers playing guileless nitwits for laughs. We both have parents that have suffered with MS. The similarities go on and on. Anna is a great wife. Very patient and understanding. Very supportive. So kind and genuine always. And she gave me a wonderful son and family of in laws that I truly love.

    Aside from the gooey words about his wife, Pratt had fun with the Reddit crowd. Some other gems included:

    I was recently bitten by a radioactive Chris Pratt. What is about to happen to me?
    Oh no. You’re probably gonna get fat and then skinny.

    I know that it is just a role, but are there any similarities between you and Peter Quill? What about Andy Dwyer?
    Quill and I are basically the same person. We were born in the same year. We loved the same movies. The same music. If I were kidnapped at 10, taken to space and based my ideology on the pop culture of 1979-1989 I would be Peter Quill.

    Chris Pratt’s advice for being an actor boiled down to this:

    Figure out whether or not you believe in yourself, and if you don’t, find a way to. Because even more than you want it, you must believe it. And learn about yourself. The rhythm of one’s spirit is just as important as what you look like or what you sound like. Who are you? What’s your voice? What are you dying to contribute?

  • Reddit Tries Out An Email Newsletter

    Reddit Tries Out An Email Newsletter

    Reddit just announced the launch of its first ever email newsletter. It’s called Upvoted Weekly, borrowing the name of its recently launched Upvoted podcast. It’s opt-in (double opt-in, actually) and promises subscribers the “very best of reddit’s content curated, packaged, and delivered to your inbox once a week.”

    “It’s free and we’ll never spam you,” says the subscription form. “We will NEVER send you an unsolicited email. Never. Seriously. If you do not check that box [to opt-in], your email address will never show up in our email list. User profile information is stored in a completely different place than the email list. These two databases do not, and will not, talk with each other.”

    Content will come “from every nook and cranny on the site,” and will be handpicked by co-founder Alexis Ohanian and his team. It will be delivered each Sunday morning “so you can enjoy it with a nice cup of coffee, tea, or bacon.” The first issue will be sent out on April 19.

    Ohanian wrote in a comment thread:

    On Product Hunt, Product manager Heath Black talked more about reddit’s reasoning for getting into email now after all these years:

    First of all, we know that a lot of people interact with reddit content across the web on a daily basis. They love the content, but don’t necessarily understand that concept of reddit itself. This helps us build some context for those two things for new users, reddit lurkers, and folks that just can’t spend all day on the site.

    Secondly, as the site continues to grow, and the amount of content submitted grows with it, finding good content can be incredibly difficult. Discovery is a hard problem to solve, and much of the best content can be found in some of the smallest corners of reddit. A weekly digest gives us the ability to call out those good content creators, no matter where they reside on reddit.

    Third, since reddit content blows up pretty often, we want to make sure that the creators of that content are given the credit they deserve. Many publishers that use their content don’t credit at all and it absolutely pisses our users off. We want reddit users to know that we love them and the creative things they do.

    That last point is also at least partially why reddit recently added embeddable comments (like the one above) as well.

    Upvoted Weekly will not factor in the subreddits a user subscribes to because, again, the email list is completely separate from the user information.

    “Every day there are millions of people that engage with reddit content across the web,” the company says. “Many of them love the CONTENT on reddit, but don’t understand the CONCEPT of reddit. This newsletter is an easy way for people to experience the great stuff that reddit creates, while maintaining proper attribution to the users that created it.”

    Reddit says to get an idea of what you’re in for, you can check out the podcast as well as the compay’s Facebook and Twitter accounts. Here’s a quick look at the latter:


    Email newsletters can go a long way toward increasing user engagement on a site, and I don’t see reddit being any different in that regard. You can see a “teaser” of how it will be laid out here.

    StumbleUpon has been trying a similar approach to increase engagement with its content, and that seems to be working pretty well. Like reddit, it too shares some of its best content on its official Facebook and Twitter accounts, and much of this ends up in emails to users as well.

    StumbleUpon takes things further, however, and is very much about user information, which it uses to personalize emails based on interests and content that users have already engaged with. We recently spoke with the company’s director of marketing here.

    “Both email marketing and social media are important pieces to the marketing mix that can significantly increase DAU [Daily Active Users],” she told us. “We are running several tests to gauge what content our users want to see. In many regards, email at StumbleUpon has been 100% dynamic content generated out of our personalization algorithm.”

    She also mentioned the company’s weekly recommendation emails, which are personalized, had the highest engagement rates.

    This is obviously a much different approach from what reddit is doing, but the completely hands-off approach it’s taking makes a lot of sense for the site. If Upvote Weekly proves successful, perhaps reddit may experiment with some more user-based email options. There are no doubt plenty of users who would prefer weekly, or even daily digests of highlights from the subreddits they actually subscribe to. We’ll see. For now, they’re not hinting at any such plans.

    Image via reddit

  • Add Value To Your Content With Reddit Embeds

    Add Value To Your Content With Reddit Embeds

    Reddit is now letting people embed its comment threads on their websites. They’ve been doing this for a couple of months with a limited number of people while the feature was in beta, but now anyone can embed comment threads from any public subreddit.

    To use the feature, just go to a comment’s permalink page, click on the “embed” link and grab the code.

    “Embeddable comments make it easy to showcase reddit comments on your website or blog without having to take screenshots or copy & paste long blocks of text,” the company says in a blog post. “Embedded comments will respect the comment author’s edits and deletions, and they’ll always feature a link back to the original comment thread and subreddit.”

    Reddit is a treasure trove of commentary on many subjects, so this feature should be able to add significant value to blog posts. Think about how much better embedded tweets and Facebook posts can make content when they’re relevant. Reddit comment threads can add a whole other type of value.

    The feature should be particularly popular for AMA (ask me anything) threads, which often occur for celebrities and other figures of note.

    Comment from discussion Steve Buscemi. AMA..

    The embed feature has a helpful component that lets you elect not to show a comment if it’s edited. If you utilize that, the comment text will be replaced by a link back to the current version of the comment on reddit if it’s edited.

    Reddit says it hopes the feature will spread the spirit of global collaboration a little further. If nothing else, it should serve to help reddit attract more eyeballs. It’s obviously a hugely popular site already, but there’s always room for growth. Twitter certainly still counts on off-site “usage”.

    It’s also a good way for good content on reddit to gain more exposure and rewards thoughtful comments on popular posts. Publishers already frequently turn to reddit for article topics, so this should help give back to the community that made the content interesting in the first place, at least in some cases.

    Image via reddit

  • Reddit Wants No Part of the Next Fappening

    Reddit Wants No Part of the Next Fappening

    Last year, hundreds of nude images of celebrities were stolen off the cloud and passed around various internet channels including 4chan and reddit. The latter, being a much more mainstream community, faced a heavy dose of criticism for allowing multiple subreddits to continue to post the nude images, despite the protestations of many of the celebrities involved.

    Reddit eventually shut down these subreddits, but it look the company a couple of weeks – much to the chagrin of those affected, privacy activists, and yes, even many reddit users.

    “The Fappening”, as the leak was dubbed, was far from the first time reddit had come under fire for its seemingly hands-off approach to the content its users post. Over the years, reddit has found itself in the middle of many a debate regarding sexually suggestive content posted without the subject’s consent. But reddit’s role in The Fappening made the biggest splash. People pay a little more attention to Jennifer Lawrence’s naked body than some random girl a redditor upskirted on the subway.

    Now, reddit’s management has decided to make some changes to help both JLaw and random subway girl. Whether or not they will work is yet to be seen, but a new addition to the site’s privacy policy shows that reddit is trying to grow up a bit – or at least hold itself accountable for some of the creepier elements of its vast empire.

    “Last year, we missed a chance to be a leader in social media when it comes to protecting your privacy — something we’ve cared deeply about since reddit’s inception. At our recent all hands company meeting, this was something that we all, as a company, decided we needed to address,” says reddit’s founder and new Executive Chairman Alexis Ohanian and CEO Ellen Pao in an announcement made Tuesday.

    “No matter who you are, if a photograph, video, or digital image of you in a state of nudity, sexual excitement, or engaged in any act of sexual conduct, is posted or linked to on reddit without your permission, it is prohibited on reddit. We also recognize that violent personalized images are a form of harassment that we do not tolerate and we will remove them when notified.”

    This sort of outright ban, issued unequivocally, is a new thing for reddit. The new privacy policy, which will go into effect March 10, has a brand new section in it called “Involuntary Pornography”. Here’s what it says:

    reddit is committed to your privacy. If you believe that someone has submitted, without your permission, to reddit a link to a photograph, video, or digital image of you in a state of nudity or engaged in any act of sexual conduct, please contact us ([email protected]), and we will expedite its removal as quickly as possible. reddit prohibits the posting of such content without consent.

    Of course, this is all contingent upon someone (presumably the victim) seeing the unauthorized imagery on reddit and filing a complaint. It’s self-reporting. Reddit isn’t going to spend resources searching its nether regions and removing anything that looks like it could fall into the “involuntary porn” category.

    And I can think of a dozen subreddits, just off the top of my head, where any number of posts could fall into this category.

    But the key phrase here is “expedite removal”. Reddit’s been criticized in the past for being slow to act. This is reddit saying all you have to do it point it out to us, and we’ll get rid of it as fast as we can.

    If you think back to 2011, you might remember that reddit had a rather popular subreddit called r/jailbait. Over on r/jailbait, folks would post photos of young girls – minors, almost exclusively – in a sexualized context. These weren’t nude photos – the girls were always clothed – but they often appeared in bathing suits and sometimes in suggestive poses.

    Well, reddit shut it down after some pressure. For those that disagreed with that decision, the argument was usually hey, it’s not porn. It’s just pictures of girls. What we’re thinking about when we look at suggestive images of girls shouldn’t be of any concern. It’s not a crime to think.

    Of course, the flip side to that is hey, you’re stealing 14-year-olds’ beach pictures off Facebook and jerking off to them.

    But the point it, there was at least a small debate over the morality, legality, and a couple other -alities regarding r/jailbait. There probably won’t be much blowback from reddit’s latest privacy policy update. Whether it’s stolen images, a la the Fappening, or revenge porn, most people (the ones not doing the posting, at least) recognize that “involuntary pornography” is some seedy ass stuff.

    Can another Fappening happen without reddit’s help? Of course. reddit’s not the alpha and the omega of internet culture. But when it does, and it will, reddit’s higher-ups don’t want the site to be a part of it.

    Image via Blake Patterson, Flickr Creative Commons

  • Edward Snowden: I Wish I Would Have Come Forward Sooner

    Edward Snowden: I Wish I Would Have Come Forward Sooner

    NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden is currently doing a reddit AMA with journalist Glenn Greenwald and Laura Poitras, the filmmaker who just won an Oscar for her Snowden documentary Citizenfour.

    Apart from some technical difficulties (mods accidentally banning his primary account), Snowden is giving some pretty thorough answers to users’ questions.

    Here are some of the best:

    TheJackal8: Mr. Snowden, if you had a chance to do things over again, would you do anything differently? If so, what?

    Snowden: I would have come forward sooner. I talked to Daniel Ellsberg about this at length, who has explained why more eloquently than I can.

    Had I come forward a little sooner, these programs would have been a little less entrenched, and those abusing them would have felt a little less familiar with and accustomed to the exercise of those powers. This is something we see in almost every sector of government, not just in the national security space, but it’s very important:

    Once you grant the government some new power or authority, it becomes exponentially more difficult to roll it back. Regardless of how little value a program or power has been shown to have (such as the Section 215 dragnet interception of call records in the United States, which the government’s own investigation found never stopped a single imminent terrorist attack despite a decade of operation), once it’s a sunk cost, once dollars and reputations have been invested in it, it’s hard to peel that back.

    Don’t let it happen in your country.

    masondog13: What’s the best way to make NSA spying an issue in the 2016 Presidential Election? It seems like while it was a big deal in 2013, ISIS and other events have put it on the back burner for now in the media and general public. What are your ideas for how to bring it back to the forefront?

    Snowden:

    This is a good question, and there are some good traditional answers here. Organizing is important. Activism is important.

    At the same time, we should remember that governments don’t often reform themselves. One of the arguments in a book I read recently (Bruce Schneier, “Data and Goliath”), is that perfect enforcement of the law sounds like a good thing, but that may not always be the case. The end of crime sounds pretty compelling, right, so how can that be?

    Well, when we look back on history, the progress of Western civilization and human rights is actually founded on the violation of law. America was of course born out of a violent revolution that was an outrageous treason against the crown and established order of the day. History shows that the righting of historical wrongs is often born from acts of unrepentant criminality. Slavery. The protection of persecuted Jews.

    But even on less extremist topics, we can find similar examples. How about the prohibition of alcohol? Gay marriage? Marijuana?

    Where would we be today if the government, enjoying powers of perfect surveillance and enforcement, had — entirely within the law — rounded up, imprisoned, and shamed all of these lawbreakers?

    Ultimately, if people lose their willingness to recognize that there are times in our history when legality becomes distinct from morality, we aren’t just ceding control of our rights to government, but our agency in determing thour futures.

    How does this relate to politics? Well, I suspect that governments today are more concerned with the loss of their ability to control and regulate the behavior of their citizens than they are with their citizens’ discontent.
    How do we make that work for us? We can devise means, through the application and sophistication of science, to remind governments that if they will not be responsible stewards of our rights, we the people will implement systems that provide for a means of not just enforcing our rights, but removing from governments the ability to interfere with those rights.

    You can see the beginnings of this dynamic today in the statements of government officials complaining about the adoption of encryption by major technology providers. The idea here isn’t to fling ourselves into anarchy and do away with government, but to remind the government that there must always be a balance of power between the governing and the governed, and that as the progress of science increasingly empowers communities and individuals, there will be more and more areas of our lives where — if government insists on behaving poorly and with a callous disregard for the citizen — we can find ways to reduce or remove their powers on a new — and permanent — basis.

    Our rights are not granted by governments. They are inherent to our nature. But it’s entirely the opposite for governments: their privileges are precisely equal to only those which we suffer them to enjoy.

    We haven’t had to think about that much in the last few decades because quality of life has been increasing across almost all measures in a significant way, and that has led to a comfortable complacency. But here and there throughout history, we’ll occasionally come across these periods where governments think more about what they “can” do rather than what they “should” do, and what is lawful will become increasingly distinct from what is moral.

    In such times, we’d do well to remember that at the end of the day, the law doesn’t defend us; we defend the law. And when it becomes contrary to our morals, we have both the right and the responsibility to rebalance it toward just ends.

    cahaseler: We’ve now known about the scary stuff happening at the NSA for quite some time. And yet from what I’ve seen, there’s been no real effort to stop it.
    What are your thoughts on what we, as regular citizens, can do now?

    Snowden: One of the biggest problems in governance today is the difficulty faced by citizens looking to hold officials to account when they cross the line. We can develop new tools and traditions to protect our rights, and we can do our best to elect new and better representatives, but if we cannot enforce consequences on powerful officials for abusive behavior, we end up in a system where the incentives reward bad behavior post-election.

    That’s how we end up with candidates who say one thing but, once in power, do something radically different. How do you fix that? Good question.

    moizsyed: How did you guys feel about about Neil Patrick Harris’ “for some treason” joke last night?

    Snowden: Wow the questions really blew up on this one. Let me start digging in…

    To be honest, I laughed at NPH. I don’t think it was meant as a political statement, but even if it was, that’s not so bad. My perspective is if you’re not willing to be called a few names to help out your country, you don’t care enough.

    “If this be treason, then let us make the most of it.”

    LegalNerd1940: What validation do we have that Putin is being honest about NOT spying in Russia?

    Snowden: To tag on to the Putin question: There’s not, and that’s part of the problem world-wide. We can’t just reform the laws in one country, wipe our hands, and call it a day. We have to ensure that our rights aren’t just being protected by letters on a sheet of paper somewhere, or those protections will evaporate the minute our communications get routed across a border. The only way to ensure the human rights of citizens around the world are being respected in the digital realm is to enforce them through systems and standards rather than policies and procedures.

    boingeh: Don’t you find it kind of depressing how little the world was actually moved by the revelations? I do. For a few days at a time it was the biggest news story ever but barely anything has changed and people are still using Google, Apple et al. in the same ways. The news in general is just so transient, watching the documentary just brought it all back. It felt like it might actually amount to something but as far as I can tell, even with the courts recently ruling that GCHQs actions were illegal for many years and NSAs whole program amounting to nothing, no significant legislation has passed and for all we know they are still rapidly expanding their programs.

    Snowden: To dogpile on to this, many of the changes that are happening are invisible because they’re happening at the engineering level. Google encrypted the backhaul communications between their data centers to prevent passive monitoring. Apple was the first forward with an FDE-by-default smartphone (kudos!). Grad students around the world are trying to come up with ways to solve the metadata problem (the opportunity to monitor everyone’s associations — who you talk to, who you sleep with, who you vote for — even in encrypted communications).

    The biggest change has been in awareness. Before 2013, if you said the NSA was making records of everybody’s phonecalls and the GCHQ was monitoring lawyers and journalists, people raised eyebrows and called you a conspiracy theorist.

    Those days are over. Facts allow us to stop speculating and start building, and that’s the foundation we need to fix the internet. We just happened to be the generation stuck with fighting these fires.

    ba_dumtshhh: First, congrats to the Oscar! Mr. Snowden, what do you think about the latest News, kaspersky broke? I understand they don’t talk about victims and aggressors because it’s their business model. But do you think they should name the nsa as an aggressor when they now about?

    Snowden: The Kaspersky report on the “Equation Group” (they appear to have stopped short of naming them specifically as NSA, although authorship is clear) was significant, but I think more significant is the recent report on the joint UK-UK hacking of Gemalto, a Dutch company that produces critical infrastructure used around the world, including here at home.

    Why? Well, although firmware exploitation is nasty, it’s at least theoretically reparable: tools could plausibly be created to detect the bad firmware hashes and re-flash good ones. This isn’t the same for SIMs, which are flashed at the factory and never touched again. When the NSA and GCHQ compromised the security of potentially billions of phones (3g/4g encryption relies on the shared secret resident on the sim), they not only screwed the manufacturer, they screwed all of us, because the only way to address the security compromise is to recall and replace every SIM sold by Gemalto.

    Our governments – particular the security branches – should never be weighing the equities in an intelligence gathering operation such that a temporary benefit to surveillance regarding a few key targets is seen as more desireable than protecting the communications of a global system (and this goes double when we are more reliant on communications and technology for our economy productivity than our adversaries).

    Updating…

    Image via Imgur, Edward Snowden

  • Reddit Is Donating $827K, 10% of Ad Revenue, to Charity

    Reddit Is Donating $827K, 10% of Ad Revenue, to Charity

    Back in February of 2014, reddit promised that at the end of the year, it would total up its ad revenue and give ten percent of it to charity. Charities, actually – reddit said it would “hold an election” based on community-nominated charities and split the ten percent of ad revenue with ten lucky charities.

    Well, now’s the time. Reddit has announced that it made $8,276,594.93 in ad revenue in 2014, so $827,659.49 will be going to charity.

    That’s $82,765.95 for each of the ten charities selected.

    “Here at reddit, one of the things that gets us out of bed every morning is knowing that we have the ability to help the world at a scale that was, until very recently, only imaginable,” says a post on the reddit blog.

    Reddit users can now vote on where the money will go. To vote, you have to already be a reddit user. You can’t just create an account today in order to vote.

    Here’s how it works:

    We have partnered with Charity Navigator, who has graciously given us access to their charity database. This database includes all charities they have reviewed, as well as all charities that have a US tax identification number (EIN). If you’re unable to find a particular charity by searching by name, just type in the charity’s EIN. This number can usually be found on the charity’s website.

    So how do you vote? Head over to reddit.com/donate and make sure you’re logged in. Your account will have to be created before 10 am today in order to reduce any potential shenanigans. You are allowed to vote for as many different charities as you like, but you are limited to one vote per charity.

    You can discuss the merits of each non-profit here. Voting closes on February 25.

    Image via reddit donate

  • Mila Kunis’ Revealing Reddit AMA

    Mila Kunis’ Revealing Reddit AMA

    Mila Kunis, like so many stars before her, took to Reddit’s AMA (Ask Me Anything) social outlet to let her fans in on what’s going on in her life.

    We love AMA. We can’t get enough. It’s a personal conversation with the people you admire, and not filtered through media.

    Mila Kunis was accomodating and amazingly revealing about her life, past and present during her session.

    As far as her present, Mila Kunis is obviously focusing on her four-month-old daughter, Wyatt.

    “It is the most life-changing experience you can have,” Mila said when asked how becoming a mother has affected her.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aMDjGEDZSRs

    “I am proud to be a stay-at-home mom. I have no desire to be in front of the camera. I find her to be the most challenging job I’ve had. The amount of love that you have, the type of love that you have, changes. The way you look at the world changes… everything has changed, because of her.”

    Mila Kunis admitted that she has become more conscious of the world around her and how she can improve it for her daughter. She said, “I want an eco-friendly car, I want to compost everything, because I want the world to be better for her. And you have the opportunity to make a really great child for the world.”

    Mila Kunis also talked about kissing Natalie Portman and noted that her and Ashton had both kissed her!

    That’s weird thing to imagine for a couple.

    Mila Kunis also used to be a pretty serious gamer with impressive experience.

    When Mila Kunis was asked about being a vocal fan of the MMORPG World of Warcraft, she said, “I have not played WOW in probably 5 years! I used to play. I played a LOT. I was in a guild, I led raids, I was a pretty badass mage. I had multiple characters. I was a frostmage, I think, by the time I stopped playing… I was level 70.”

    Amazing! That is why we love Mila Kunis and AMA.

    What do you think was the most interesting thing to come out of Mila Kunis’ AMA?

  • Reddit Has Never Received a National Security Letter

    Reddit Has Never Received a National Security Letter

    Reddit has just released its first ever transparency report, detailing governmental requests for user information, content removal requests, and more.

    What’s striking about reddit’s first report is the low volume of requests – only 55 total user info requests and 218 content removal requests in all of 2014.

    According to reddit, it complied with 58 percent and 31 percent of those, respectively.

    One of the more interesting aspects of the report is this nugget:

    “As of January 29, 2015, reddit has never received a National Security Letter, an order under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, or any other classified request for user information. If we ever receive such a request, we would seek to let the public know it existed,” says reddit.

    For a site with as many users and as much traffic as reddit, this is rather surprising.

    Of course, what it would be able to say about any hypothetical National Security Letter would be limited, at best. Most NSLs come with a gag order riding piggyback, so the companies who received the letter can’t discuss it with the users whose information has been requested.

    Some companies, like Google and Facebook, are allowed to disclose incredibly vague NSL information to users. How vague? Well, Google, for instance, can tell us that it received somewhere between 0 and 999 NSLs last year, representing between 1,000 and 1,999 user accounts.

    So, pretty vague.

    “Many government requests we receive contain demands to withhold notice from users that carry no legal weight. We actively disregard these non-binding demands.”

    If an NSL ever comes its way, reddit’s going to have a much tougher time “actively disregarding” its terms and conditions.

    You can check out the full report here.

    Images via reddit, reddit on Facebook

  • Leelah Alcorn: Her Reddit Posts Tell a Haunting Story of Christian Anti-Gay Therapy

    Leelah Alcorn: Her Reddit Posts Tell a Haunting Story of Christian Anti-Gay Therapy

    When Leelah Alcorn committed suicide, she had already set events in motion that would tell the world why she did it. Rather than a paper suicide note that might be found only by her parents, she set up a Tumblr message that would publish after her death.

    “If you are reading this, it means that I have committed suicide and obviously failed to delete this post from my queue.”

    Leelah’s note went on to describe a life that she decided “isn’t worth living in.” Her struggle as a transgender person in a religious household had brought her to a tragic conclusion.

    “I’m never going to be happy. Either I live the rest of my life as a lonely man who wishes he were a woman or I live my life as a lonelier woman who hates herself. There’s no winning. There’s no way out. I’m sad enough already, I don’t need my life to get any worse. People say “it gets better” but that isn’t true in my case. It gets worse. Each day I get worse.”

    Leelah’s parents deleted her Tumblr account, but nothing ever really goes away on the Internet.

    Leelah described her home life as miserable, saying that her parents opposed her self-identification as female based on their religious affiliation.

    “My mom started taking me to a therapist, but would only take me to christian therapists, (who were all very biased) so I never actually got the therapy I needed to cure me of my depression. I only got more christians telling me that I was selfish and wrong and that I should look to God for help.”

    Leelah’s mother told CNN a different story. Carla Alcorn said that her son Josh — Leelah’s birth name — was depressed and was being treated with medication.

    “He just quit talking about (being transgender),” she said. She also said that she had never heard the name “Leelah” used by her son.

    But Tumblr is not the only place that Leelah spoke about her ordeal. Her archived Reddit posts tell a story of living in a home where her parents were were “both extremely angry with me.”

    “They never physically hurt me, but they always talked to me in a very derogatory tone. They would say things like ‘You’ll never be a real girl’ or ‘What’re you going to do, fuck boys?’ or ‘God’s going to send you straight to hell’. These all made me feel awful about myself, I was christian at the time so I thought that God hated me and that I didn’t deserve to be alive. I cut myself at least once every couple days, and I was constantly thinking about suicide.”

    Leelah spoke of being sent to what is known as conversion therapy, an attempt to try to “cure” gay and transgender people.

    “I wanted to see a gender therapist but they wouldn’t let me, they thought it would corrupt my mind. The would only let me see biased Christian therapists, who instead of listening to my feelings would try to change me into a straight male who loved God, and I would cry after every session because I felt like it was hopeless and there was no way I would ever become a girl.”

    Since Leelah’s suicide, a petition has been started seeking to ban conversion therapy. The statements accompany the petition read:

    “We the petitioners call upon the President of the United States, Barack Obama, and the Leadership of the House and Senate to immediately seek a pathway for banning the practice known as ‘transgender conversion therapy’. We ask that you name the bill in memory of Leelah as the Leelah’s Alcorn Law and protect the lives of transgender youth.”

    So far, the petition has 286,000 supporters.

  • Elon Musk to Host Reddit AMA with Focus on Ocean Rocket Landing

    Elon Musk to Host Reddit AMA with Focus on Ocean Rocket Landing

    In the early morning hours of Tuesday, January 6, Elon Musk’s SpaceX will attempt to land a rocket on a platform that floating in the Atlantic Ocean. No big deal.

    And if you want to ask Mr. Musk about that, or presumably anything else about which you’re curious (and there should be a lot), then you should head over to reddit a little before 9pm EST for an AMA session.

    According to Space.com, “the California-based private spaceflight company will try to land the first stage of its Falcon 9 rocket on a floating platform in the Atlantic Ocean, shortly after the booster launches SpaceX’s robotic Dragon cargo capsule from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida at 6:20 a.m. EST.”

    And according to SpaceX, the chances of this happening according to plan is about 50/50.

    “Returning anything from space is a challenge, but returning a Falcon 9 first stage for a precision landing presents a number of additional hurdles. At 14 stories tall and traveling upwards of 1300 m/s (nearly 1 mi/s), stabilizing the Falcon 9 first stage for reentry is like trying to balance a rubber broomstick on your hand in the middle of a wind storm,” says the company.

    Although Musk says the AMA will be focused on the rocket launch, reddit AMAs tend to meander about. If I were you, I’d get in a question or two about Skynet. I think he’ll bite on those.

  • Reddit Had 71.25 Billion Pageviews In 2014

    Reddit Had 71.25 Billion Pageviews In 2014

    We’ve seen a lot of year-end posts from most of the major Internet companies, but only now are we getting something for reddit. This one is interesting because it actually includes stats for the site.

    Here’s what reddit is reporting for 2014:

    71.25 billion pageviews
    Over 8 thousand active communities
    54.9 million posts and submissions
    535 million comments comprised of 3.23 billion words
    3.73 billion link votes
    2.01 billion comment votes
    886,745 reddit live updates posted
    138,893 redditors gifted reddit gold
    386,803 redditgifts exchange signups
    1.6 million official reddit app installs

    In the post, reddit points to a variety of subreddit “best ofs,” as well as some top posts and comments.

    In September, reddit raised a $50 million round of funding. Earlier this month, it introduced reddit notes to give back to the community.

    Image via reddit

  • Reddit Introduces Reddit Notes To Give Back To Community

    Reddit Introduces Reddit Notes To Give Back To Community

    Back in September, reddit announced that it raised a $50 Million round of funding. At the time, then-CEO Yishan Wong said reddit was thinking about creating a cryptocurrency and making it backed by those shares of the company, and then distributing it to the community.

    In the months that have passed, they’ve been trying to figure out how best to give back to the community, even as Wong has departed the company. Today, reddit announced reddit notes.

    The company explains in a blog post:

    A few weeks ago, we asked you what you thought would be the best ways for us to follow through on the promise. Thank you to the thousands of you who participated. You shared with us a variety of creative ideas – from donating to charities, to crowdfunding community-sourced projects, to customized “thank yous” for individual contributions to reddit.

    Well, we took these ideas and we’ll be making them a reality in the form of something we’re calling reddit notes. We’ve made progress on the specifics, and we’re finally able to share with you more of how reddit notes will roll out!

    To celebrate all of you and your contributions, we plan to give away reddit notes in a random lottery. As of this point, it looks like we’re going to have approximately 950,000 reddit notes to divide among active user accounts. There aren’t as many reddit notes as there are accounts, so if you get one, lucky you! Eligible recipients of reddit notes will be determined based on activities before 9/30/14 (when we first announced this project), and we plan to give them away in the fall of 2015.

    Reddit says it’s still working out details on both the technological and legal aspects reddit notes, but will share more info about it early in the new year. The subreddit is (obviously) r/redditnotes.

    Image via reddit

  • Cheating Note: Man Rats Out Pregnant Girl Texting Secret Lover at Football Game

    Cheating Note: Man Rats Out Pregnant Girl Texting Secret Lover at Football Game

    A Detroit Lions fan claims that he caught a pregnant woman sitting in front of him at a game recently texting another man while her husband sat there unaware. Rather than mind his own business, the man slipped the unsuspecting hubby a note.

    The man, who calls himself “Lye” posted to his Facebook account later that day about the incident.

    “I was at the Detroit Lions game today when I noticed this woman who looked eight months pregnant in a seat in front of me texting a man messages like ‘I wish I was with you all day’ and ‘I will see you as soon as I’m done with him’.

    “She kept hiding her phone every time her partner put his arm around her or reached in to talk to her.

    “So being the man that I am I couldn’t help it…I had to write him a little note.”

    He included a snapshot he had taken over the woman’s shoulder, as well as a picture of the note he handed to the other man. The note read:

    “Hey bro,

    “I don’t know you & you don’t know me. When you get home check your girl’s phone.

    “She’s been texting “Jason” saying she wishes she was with him all day!

    “Take care, wish you the best,

    “Happy Thanksgiving & #Chive ON!’”

    Some have theorized that his “#Chive ON” sign-off may indicate that the whole thing is a hoax, or perhaps even a marketing ply by Chive.

    When the story hit Reddit, commenters were of more than one mind about what “Lye” may have stirred up.

    “This man potentially spared another man a life of cuckold misery. Props to him.”

    “Girl gets beat up on a regular basis by her husband. He swaps her birth control so she gets pregnant and can’t leave him. She meets Jason at Church and they plan to get her away from there, after the ball game when her husband is done beating her up drunk, and falls asleep. Plan is sabotaged by this a-hole, and when she gets home it’s all the excuse he needs to kill her.”

  • Reddit Co-Founder Says the Front Page Is Atrocious

    Reddit Co-Founder Says the Front Page Is Atrocious

    In 2005, Steve Huffman and Alexis Ohanian co-founded reddit – surely unaware of what the site would become. In a year, reddit would become a Conde Nast property. As of today, reddit is seeing over six billion pageviews a month from nearly 200 million unique visitors.

    But Huffman’s not too happy with the Front Page or the efforts reddit has made in mobile since his departure.

    “I don’t think they’re doing a very good job right now and that is frustrating to watch,” he said in a recent interview with IT Pro. “I think the front page is atrocious these days. That said, they have done a very admirable job of staying alive and dealing with the controversies.”

    “Their mobile sucks and the product hasn’t changed since I left in any significant way. So it hasn’t aged very well. I think the product (…) the mobile strategy could be a lot better,” he continued.

    Reddit recently purchased top reddit iOS app Alien Blue, which in lieu of a true native reddit app will now serve as the “official reddit app”.

    Those are some seemingly strong words from a company’s co-founder. Of course, words can sound harsher than the speaker ever intended.

    Huffman attempted to clarify the statements on reddit, where he operates as user spez.

    While I stand by my criticism of the front page – I’ve said for years I think reddit should work to make it more diverse – I’m really upset they would claim I’m not proud of reddit, or twist my words to support that narrative.

    I’m incredibly proud of what reddit has become. It’s wonderful and has grown far beyond what I ever could have imagined in the early days.

    The IT Pro article also claims that “the full terms of that 2006 deal have never been made public but the feeling is that had they held out, Huffman and Ohanian could now be billionaires.”

    Huffman simply said that was “doubtful”.

    He also provided a little bit of insight on the Conde Nast sale:

    Dead is too strong a word. It felt like the company was falling apart. Was it actually? Hard to say. Also, we felt like we were heading into a rough economy (correct), and that we might not be able to survive on our own. It was important to both Alexis and I to finish out our contracts at Conde (three year), which we did. I think everyone agrees they got their money’s worth…

    Post-reddit, Huffman founded travel site Hipmunk in 2010.

    Image via rhettigan, Flickr Creative Commons

  • Alexis Ohanian Returns to Reddit as Executive Chairman, Yishan Wong Resigns as CEO

    Alexis Ohanian Returns to Reddit as Executive Chairman, Yishan Wong Resigns as CEO

    Today brings a bit of a shakeup at the top of reddit corporate HQ, as CEO Yishan Wong has resigned his position.

    Reddit co-founder Alexis Ohanian announced the news in a blog post, saying that the company is “grateful for his contributions over the last few years, including growing reddit from 35M to 174M, and we have a team in place to ensure that reddit’s best years are still ahead of it.”

    According to Sam Altman, who’s spent the past eight days as interim reddit CEO, Wong left over an internal dispute of an office.

    “The reason was a disagreement with the board about a new office (location and amount of money to spend on a lease). To be clear, though, we didn’t ask or suggest that he resign—he decided to when we didn’t approve the new office plan,” he writes.

    Ellen Pao will be the interim CEO. As number two in command Pao has been responsible for running reddit’s operations for some time now. He most recent move was the acquisition of Alien Blue – the popular iOS reddit app.

    The blog post is titled “Coming Home”, and that’s what Ohanian himself is announcing. Ohanian left reddit four years ago and spent that time involved in activism. In 2012, he led a bus tour across the country campaigning for an open internet. With the battle for Net Neutrality heating up, Ohanian has decided to come back to where he started it all.

    Ohanian was always a board member, but now he’s returning to an active role.

    “I joined the board and have done everything I can to not be a helicopter parent, but rather support reddit and all the amazing people who make it work as best I can. But reddit is and will always be my baby (yes, reddit has two dads, and that’s awesome).

    “Now at a little over nine years old, with thousands of communities, reddit is at an amazing inflection point and I’m thrilled to return to help it achieve all that it can. We’ve got a lot of work to do: mobile, user experience, and community tools are on the top of our list, but as always, we can’t do it without you,” has says.

    Image via Wikimedia Commons