Honestly I think that’s just a failing of community ethos. It’d be nice to bring back the expectation that people make the bare minimum attempt to check the rules of a community they’re trying to participate in, and let moderators just assume that everyone has read the sidebar rules. If you haven’t, and you break a rule by accident… well, tough luck, you’ll get the same treatment as everyone else. Next time, read before posting.
The thing about automod comments is that they were, indeed, comments. As such, they showed up in your replies.
So if you made a post, you’d get that message in a place you would expect to see content that you would actually want to engage with, that is, people discussing your post.
Brave for your to assume that people read the automod comments. I quickly learned to igbore it, it was a second nature for me to scroll past it.
Than again, I never had any serious troubles with my posts or comments being moderated. Perhaps I was just not being a jerk which seems to get you very far (not already if course as some Reddits were nazis about their silly rules).
They don’t have to behave the same way fortunately, like auto replying to every thread posted.
They likely will do some day because most people don’t read what the sidebar says…
Honestly I think that’s just a failing of community ethos. It’d be nice to bring back the expectation that people make the bare minimum attempt to check the rules of a community they’re trying to participate in, and let moderators just assume that everyone has read the sidebar rules. If you haven’t, and you break a rule by accident… well, tough luck, you’ll get the same treatment as everyone else. Next time, read before posting.
Ask yourself, did automod actually help that?
The thing about automod comments is that they were, indeed, comments. As such, they showed up in your replies.
So if you made a post, you’d get that message in a place you would expect to see content that you would actually want to engage with, that is, people discussing your post.
So, in short, yes.
It can be implemented directly, though. Like as a site feature showing a message above the comment form, not as a bot making posts.
Brave for your to assume that people read the automod comments. I quickly learned to igbore it, it was a second nature for me to scroll past it.
Than again, I never had any serious troubles with my posts or comments being moderated. Perhaps I was just not being a jerk which seems to get you very far (not already if course as some Reddits were nazis about their silly rules).
On narwhal I had them all automatically minimised. Very easy to ignore then.
On Boost, I did the same.