Me, in my white male tech bubble, focused on user interface annoyances in 
Reddit. I asked around with some other developers I work with and have worked 
with and Reddit (along with Twitter) was viewed as a place that has been too 
friendly to hate speech — particularly racist and misogynist hate speech — and 
they were uncomfortable giving Reddit any business.

Mark

> On Jan 2, 2017, at 8:23 PM, Mark Hamburg <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> The web interface to Reddit is abysmal. Email isn't great but Reddit seems 
> incredibly tedious.
> 
>> On Mon, Jan 2, 2017 at 7:21 PM, Charlie Koster <[email protected]> wrote:
>> I just wanted to confirm one of your assertions anecdotally. In the past 
>> week I wrote two Elm blog posts and opted to post them to /r/elm rather than 
>> elm-discuss for precisely the first two bullet points you listed. A linear 
>> discussion would have been largely unhelpful and distracting.
>> 
>> I also wanted to reinforce the importance of good moderation. I've seen 
>> small subreddits grow and die due to a lack of moderation, but the ones that 
>> have good moderation that encourage productive discussion end up doing well.
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