I worked on a similar large social platform with shadow-bans and more strict auto-bans, we had <10% of accounts with "uncommon" usage patterns from paid-user farms, bots, and power-users. The platform prefers a user who sees ads, has rich tracking data, stays logged in, has clean analytics, has persistent caches. Their view is that if you're technical enough to trigger a bot-ban, you're technical enough overcome a ban and make a new account, after all there are 900 million other "normal"ish users with higher ARPU.
To avoid auto-bans, emulate the preferred "dumb" user:
- Use the default app
- Avoid VPN/Proxy (AWS-hosted VPN exits are blocked on Reddit, appeals ignored)
- Avoid analytics-blockers in adblock/pi-hole/dns
- Avoid chrome plugins that scrape (shopping, reviews, media downloaders)
- Limit incognito usage, keep your new-login count low
- Limit deleting / cache-clearing mobile app
- Limit new logins on many devices/browsers/profiles on the same IP
- Limit cmd+clicking 10+ posts in the background (triggers bot-like flag)
- Start new accounts slowly, don't over-do it the first month
To avoid report-bans / moderator-bans / strikes:
- Avoid posting screenshots / URL embeds unless common for the subreddit
- Always add flare (tags) to new posts, many subs auto-mod no-flare posts
- Be careful what you say on "brand" subs like r/Comcast_Xfinity, r/unitedairlines, r/NFL. They hire "brand managers" to use reddit, and if the brand doesn't like it, they can report your posts towards a ban.
Apple never releases a "pro" mini -- with the same camera/processor as the larger variants. Thinking back, the iPhone 5s was near the perfect size for my pockets.
These days I find myself leaving my phone more and more, only taking it when I probably need a camera.
Yep -- after taking on 3+ job contexts (teaching, software startups, and volunteer orgs), I lost all confidence in saying people's names because I started having trouble recalling them... people I knew for years.
For others, I recommend "The End of Burnout" by Jonathan Malesic. It helped me to identify unhealthy work habits and change the priority system I use to manage my time.
To avoid auto-bans, emulate the preferred "dumb" user:
- Use the default app
- Avoid VPN/Proxy (AWS-hosted VPN exits are blocked on Reddit, appeals ignored)
- Avoid analytics-blockers in adblock/pi-hole/dns
- Avoid chrome plugins that scrape (shopping, reviews, media downloaders)
- Limit incognito usage, keep your new-login count low
- Limit deleting / cache-clearing mobile app
- Limit new logins on many devices/browsers/profiles on the same IP
- Limit cmd+clicking 10+ posts in the background (triggers bot-like flag)
- Start new accounts slowly, don't over-do it the first month
To avoid report-bans / moderator-bans / strikes:
- Avoid posting screenshots / URL embeds unless common for the subreddit
- Always add flare (tags) to new posts, many subs auto-mod no-flare posts
- Be careful what you say on "brand" subs like r/Comcast_Xfinity, r/unitedairlines, r/NFL. They hire "brand managers" to use reddit, and if the brand doesn't like it, they can report your posts towards a ban.