this post was submitted on 16 Sep 2025
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putting limits on the number of subs a user can moderate is like putting limits on the number of articles a wikipedia editor can edit.
typically moderation is an opt in job and you want people who actually want to do it to keep things going smoothly. all this will do is make the pool even smaller which will lead to subs becoming more toxic.
Allowing opt-in moderation attracts mods with an agenda. That's a big problem with Reddit.
I think it's a pointless change, it's not too difficult to create multiple identities if you wanted to moderate multiple subreddits. The actors trying to control subreddit moderation for commercial or political purposes will not be slowed down by the requirement that they maintain multiple identities.
If they wanted to 'fix' the comment toxicity problem, they could require x active moderators per active user. If it goes above that then non-subscribers can't comment. The rules don't mean much if there are 10,000 people commenting on each of 3 posts and there is 1 moderator who's afk and checking the report queue a few time per day.
Also, if you notice from most of Lemmy, having a smaller community creates social pressure for people to behave better. Once it gets to the point where you never see the same person twice people think they can behave badly because nobody knows them.