- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
- [email protected]
- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
- [email protected]
This video shows that Reddit refused to delete all comments and posts of its users when they close their account via a CCPA / GDPR request.
This is absolutely insane, and shows that companies OWN you.
I personally believe that reddit is the type of company to save the orginal post and revert it just out of spite
i wouldnt put that sort of crap past a pedophile like Spez
This honestly is much worse than twitter, because atleast with twitter, I didnt see them doing this typa shit
The difference is that Musk doesn’t have the knowledge and skill to do it.
I personally doubt that.
Musk might not have his own personal knowledge. But this is violating a law in California in which the person in this video seems to in California.
Plus reddit seems to based in California.
This goes behind being a scumbag, and into the territory of ignoring the CCPA.
This is magnitudes worse than simply being a greedy capitalist.
Or have the skill (or desire) to keep the personal that have the knowledge in the company.
They have been reverting them. I’ve been observing it in action my my Reddit account as I delete things. Even old posts that I recall deleting years ago (like random things on r/Hearthstone after I stopped playing Blizzard games) have been making a return over the past month. I’ve been going in and doing batches of edits to my post history every few days, and editing it differently. From ten years ago to now, I’ve had posts re-appearing and the edits getting un-edited.
Wild.
Are you absolutely certain? I just as well might not bother with the mass edit then.
The issue there isn’t that Reddit stores the edit history (that would be too much storage space), but that it doesn’t apply the edit at all and just pretends to if it you recently edited something else. You need to wait after each edit for your next edit to go through.
I had success with this Power Delete Suite fork, which waits for 5 seconds after each edit.
Thanks for letting me know, I’ll give it a shot when I have time. (And edit results here if I remember.)
They probably do have copies of deleted posts/comments, also copies of the original for edits. I don’t know of a single company that easily allows users to “really” delete something.
Database backups cannot easily be edited, for example.