Honestly I’m not sure where best to discuss this but I’ve been seeing a crazy rise in astroturfing lately.

A couple examples I’ve found that are boggling my mind: Antivirus https://old.reddit.com/r/GettingOverItGame/comments/165kgw7/best_antivirus_reddit_recommends_in_2023_for/ Here is a niche gaming subreddit crosspost of a post on a user whose posts are kinda… sus? They all seem like shit copy written by AI.

I mean who says

Reddit, with its vast user-driven content and unfiltered opinions, is a goldmine for genuine reviews. If you’re searching for the best antivirus Reddit users vouch for in 2023, you’re in the right place.

Hella questionable.

And the links? 1: removed post. 2: Links thru some redirecter that are all to the two VPNs being advertised by the post.

I mean it’s obviously an advertisement just from the fact that only the two shilled services are linked to.

Another example: https://old.reddit.com/r/Spyware/comments/159e2te/what_is_the_best_antivirus_of_2023/

Same products. Same links to only the shilled products. There’s also links to trustpilot but I did a bit of digging and it seems that they’re like yelp in that you can get reviews removed? sigh.

What I find interesting here is the fact that this spyware subreddit is new and tiny, and one of the moderators made this veryyyyy similar AI post.

I mean it even has almost the exact same “Other Subreddits to _____ Antivirus Software” section.

Frankly I’m wondering if I should break the links just so they don’t get extra weight on search engines.

I’ve also seen tons of sock puppet accounts for crappy dating apps, but honestly I’m more of a lurker and I’ve ran out of energy to write anything else here 😌

  • gsa
    link
    fedilink
    11 year ago

    The new mods aren’t doing a great job, and that’s why we have all this spam today.

    implying reddit mods were ever doing a good job

    lol, lmao even!

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      51 year ago

      Adequate, is the term I would prefer to use in this case. May not be great, but in most cases it was good enough. There were also higly moderated subs such as r/science where the quality was a lot higher.