• Briongloid@aussie.zone
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      1 year ago

      I feel that every publisher/developer could self-host, basically having a subreddit that is more within their control than before.

      Game forums still have good information, this could unite what Reddit hadn’t fully.

    • StrayCatFrump@beehaw.org
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      1 year ago

      It’s owned by Microsoft now. Not like M$ is any better than Reddit. Software devs unionized? Nope. Didn’t think so.

  • squidzorz@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    Pretty rich coming from the guys who overly moderate players’ private Minecraft servers up to and including banning players for saying a no-no word…

    • dark_stang@beehaw.org
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      1 year ago

      If they’re banning people who use slurs, I’m all for it and beehaw may not be the place for you.

      • araly@beehaw.org
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        1 year ago

        if you’re not aware of that whole thing, the issue is not that mojang is banning people for using slurs, it’s that their list of bad words with way too broad, and you might get banned for saying “night” or I think even “zzzzz” or whatever things you might say as you’re going to sleep.

        banning for slur, yes very good banning for a word that’s in a naughty list that’s not bad or even pretty common, that’s silly

      • JshKlsn@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        I hate this response.

        Mojang also spies on your private server hosted on your own PC with your own internet playing with your own friends.

        Mojang shouldn’t get that kind of control. That’s crazy.

        Also, does Mojang require photo ID before they ban people for “slurs”? I’m not sure if a black person should get banned for saying the N word on their own private server.

        Maybe if Mojang helps pay for my internet bill or my electricity bill they can have control over my private server. Until then, they can kindly screw off.

        And the fact they’ve released patches specifically to block mods that remove chat reporting and nothing else goes to show how scummy they are.

        Chat reporting should only be enabled on PUBLIC REALM servers hosted by Mojang. That’s really the only place you can justify what they are doing.

      • Cylinsier@beehaw.org
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        1 year ago

        I agree with that but they have also at times banned people for just regular swearing on their own private servers.

      • Evoke3626@lemmy.fmhy.ml
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        1 year ago

        Being anti freedom of speech (as a concept not the law) is fucking cringe.

        No beehaw isn’t the place for me.

  • oblast@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    reddit finds out that telling people they don’t actually own their own communities is… counter-productive??/!!! 😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱😱

  • LambentMote@lemmy.nz
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    1 year ago

    Good on them. I hope others follow suit. As an aside, I recently switched to a lemmy app instead of using my ad blocked browser, and holy shit PCGamer’s website is an unusable dystopian nightmare. You have to read the article through a tiny letterbox of multiple competing videos and across the short article there are three full page ads to dismiss. Fuck that.

    Here’s the full article text to save you a click.

    If you want official updates from the Minecraft dev team, you better not look on Reddit. A post from a Reddit user bearing the name sliced_lime and a flair indicating they are the Minecraft Java Tech Lead (almost certainly Mojang’s Mikael Hedberg) announced yesterday that Mojang would no longer be posting official content to Reddit, in the wake of that platform’s response to protests over changes to its API.

    “As you have no doubt heard by now, Reddit management introduced changes recently that have led to rule and moderation changes across many subreddits,” read the post, before announcing that those changes have led Mojang to “no longer feel that Reddit is an appropriate place to post official content or refer [its] players to”.

    The events are only obliquely referred to in the post, but it seems the move has been sparked by Reddit’s crackdown on protests against recent changes to its API that would, in essence, kill off third-party apps that let users access the site.

    Subreddit mods have spent the last few weeks mounting various campaigns against Reddit’s corporate leadership, either “going dark” by turning the subreddits they oversee into private, invite-only communities or else marking them as NSFW, meaning Reddit can’t sell ads on those pages. Reddit responded by pressuring disgruntled mods, and in some cases ousting and trying to replace them.

    In practice, the biggest impact of this departure will be the end of the subreddit’s official changelog threads, where the subreddit’s 7.4 million Minecraft fans and players can pore over official updates in granular detail and offer their feedback directly to the devs who hang out there. Sliced_lime emphasises that players are, naturally, “welcome to post unofficial update threads going forward,” and can always “visit [Mojang’s] feedback site at feedback.minecraft.net” or else contact it via social media.

    User reaction has been pretty understanding, which probably only highlights just how angry everyone is with Reddit’s leadership right now. The top-voted comment on sliced_lime’s post, from DamageBooster, just says “Understandable” before asking where else users can access official changelogs.

    Still, even if there are other avenues to reach Mojang, it seems fairly dramatic for a game as incomprehensibly massive and significant as Minecraft to cut off Reddit as one of its official ports of call. It’s reminiscent of advertisers fleeing Twitter in the wake of Elon Musk’s messy assumption of leadership at that company. Time will tell if Reddit’s leadership will take any notice, though (I can’t say I’m optimistic).

    I’ve reached out to Microsoft to ask if any more of its studios are going to follow Mojang’s suit and cut off Reddit as a source of official communication, and I’ll update this piece if I hear back.

    For now, I think this is a one-off. There’s no sign of any other Microsoft studio doing anything similar so far, so this seems more like a situation that has personally aggravated sliced_lime (and presumably their fellow Mojang devs) than a Microsoft-wide initiative. But who knows? Perhaps one of the biggest companies in the world will take some time off fighting multiple national market regulators at once to direct its ire at Reddit executives. If that doesn’t get their attention, nothing will.