u/GoodnightLondon wrote (the comment Michael replied to):
It means accept the fact that the sub is going to be a reflection of the market. There's no reason to shut it down until the market improves. People are getting honest feedback here; the subreddit shouldn't exist just to hype up boot camps, and shutting it down would remove an
u/michaelnovati replied ·
I think at a minimum, the sub needs a little more explicit rules and structure so the mods can take more action within the rules. I expect most content to be negative because of the market, and agree with that, but there is a difference between people sharing
Reddit has launched a ton of new tools in recent months, both automated and configuration based to help moderators. The automated ones remove a ton of spammy and likely bad actor content daily. We haven't touched the other ones yet though. For example, when adding flair to posts to tag the type of post and having prompts and guiding questions if you choose those flairs. If someone tags something as a review, we can prompt with questions we suggest they answer to try to turn raw complaint posts into constructive negative feedback.