Reddit's Ban Evasion Detection Is Fucking Orwellian
Sorry for the rant, I don't know if it belongs here, I'm new. But I am just super disappointed and want to maybe help people in the future experiencing something similar so we can cope together.
So, a few days ago, one of my random alt accounts on Reddit gets sitewide banned for harassment because I called someone dumb in the comments (literally no more than that) as a joke on a shitpost a few years ago. I laugh the random account ban off and delete the account and return to my normal Redditing.
Now, I've been a daily commenter and poster on Reddit for several years at this point. You could call it addiction. But I also use it for updates and questions at my local university, so it's also made its way into my personal life, too.
So, after the ban, I figured I was fine and I could continue to use one of my many other accounts. I was wrong.
Nope. A few hours later, ALL of my accounts over the last decade or so get permanently banned for ban evasion. I did not know Reddit bans were global like that. So, obviously I try to appeal the bullshit original ban, but I DELETED the account so I couldn't.
I try to appeal on the alts, but I get the same generic "your request has been denied" message. Over and over again across all of them, same message.
So, I figure that they banned me for having my other accounts on the same device. Really shitty all my accounts were gone but I was reluctantly fine to start over by removing them all and deleting the app.
Those accounts got banned too.
Okay, looks like it's by IP and device. Cool. I'll... use the browser version on Brave and use a VPN when I want to post on Reddit. Super inconvenient but I'll do what I have to do.
All accounts created or largely used on a VPN get shadow banned and appeals are ignored.
Okay, VPNs don't work. I'll delete all my account info on all my devices, reset my router to change my IP, use a new device, and not sign into any accounts other than Reddit and that should be good!
It works for a few hours. Perfectly fine. But, as I scroll more and more, I start to see communities that I recognize from my old accounts. No big deal, they probably recommend those communities to a lot of new users.
But, as I scrolled more and more, even smaller communities showed up that I used. Smaller, smaller, and even smaller, until eventually these were subs under 5k members even though I didn't interact with he vast majority. They caught me, again, on a brand new device with a different IP.
Well fuck. Reddit is going to be the biggest inconvenience ever to use again. But I had one last trick up my sleeve.
A special VPN that uses the network of its users to reroute internet so websites are extremely unlikely to ban each individual server. A fucking virtual linux machine. Brave browser with the most secure settings.
It went well for longer this time, a few days, but the same Orwellian shit happened. More and more tiny subs until I saw ones with mere single digit upvotes on all the posts on subs with just a few thousand members. And then, just a day or two after my account creation, boom. Permanent ban there, too.
There is literally nothing you can do to get back on Reddit if you're banned and want to use it in even a slightly normal way. I have submitted an appeal on the reddithelp form, but this is also extremely unlikely to be accepted even though the ban was bullshit; they haven't responded yet. I don't think I can ever use Reddit again because their system uses the most advanced AI to detect evaders I have ever seen. They're definitely spending tens of millions monthly on computer costs and research SOLELY to catch evaders and it fucking works.
So, I guess I'm a Lemming from now on. Super upset, Lemmy doesn't have subs for my favourite games and even the more popular games are super inactive. But, there is nothing I can do. Sorry for the rant but I know I started reading ban posts like these for hours when I first got banned, so I hope I can help people in the future realize they're completely done for unless their appeal gets accepted.
TL;DR: Even with a completely unrelated device, IP, and a virtual machine, Reddit's AI will detect what types of posts you like until they are slightly confident it's you. Then, permanent ban. You cannot avoid this. I'm super bummed out.
Edit: For peoples who have had site-wide bans doomscrolling about it in the future like I was, I'm not saying evading a ban is impossible. If you really want to get back on don't give up hope, I'm just saying it's going to be very difficult. But definitely consider contributing to the awesome Lemmy community. I know it's missing a lot, but it does help scratch the itch. I recommend the Blorp app as it's the most similar to Reddit's UI.
Edit 2: It's been 2 months and I haven't been banned on a new account, but this mostly only works if you just use it casually for when maybe you figure out how to do something and want to help others in the comments or when you have a question you want to ask a community. Here's how to do it: (and I'm not sure how mandatory each step is but this is how I did it)
- Delete the Reddit phone apps permanently. They track you super hardcore.
- Sign out on all devices and clear all browser info.
- Make a new Windows profile and get the Brave browser.
- Record your IP. Restart your router overnight. Check your IP again and if it's different you're good to go.
- NEVER log into your old Reddit accounts. Maybe even migrate away from those old emails. If you accidentally log into a banned account a few times you might be fine but it also makes it possible to be banned. I've done it a few times.
- Make a new Reddit account with a new email. DO NOT USE A VPN for the first month or so until you get some karma. You will always be shadow banned. Then consider switching to some sort of paid VPN but NOT AT FIRST.
- Use it for a few days on the new Windows profile and make sure not to get any crazy anti tracking reduction plugins, (or really any plugins at all besides maybe an ad blocker) just use default Brave. You don't want to stand out to Reddit's systems.
- After a month or so you can just look at Google searches that lead to Reddit on your old devices as long as you've completely cleared the browser info, but never log into your new or old account on there. Only use your new account on the new Windows profile.
That's it. Not sure if I'll ever get banned again but this has worked for about 2 months even with me accidentally logging into my old accounts that were banned on the IP somehow (but I started using a VPN about a month in since you CANT use one for the first month or so)
Yeah, if you were browsing on your phone you won't really be able to do that in your favourite communities anymore. But you'll be able to post questions or solutions to problems every now and then which is what really matters.
I hope I helped someone out there and let me know if you used this and if it worked
Be the change that you want to see on Lemmy. Make or participate in a community if you want it here.
True. And we need to stop bullshit like this.
Imagine if in the future, a company like Tencent managed to buy all the big social medias, or even if all the big social medias teamed up to ban stuff that goes against an agenda.
The future equivalents (or maybe the same as the ones we have now) of Reddit, Instagram, Facebook, Discord, Youtube, Google, etc. could share their moderation tactics and ban anyone that speaks badly about whatever agenda they have.
Then, the Orwellian tech giants could use lightweight AI to detect evasion like I experienced on Reddit. No matter what, where, or how, they would ALWAYS be able to link a user to a banned user within hours or days no matter how little IP or fingerprint similarities they were JUST BY USAGE PATTERNS.
This is fucking creepy and insane. The future we are heading towards does not look bright when it comes to surveillance.
Although I'm reluctant to use Lemmy because of its tiny (but not nonexistent) size, I do think I will create some small communities similar to the ones on Reddit that I miss even if I'm the only one there.
Personally I've moved on from Reddit communities to Discord server communities.
Discord is following the same paths as reddit and can easily do the same to you
Haven't gotten sidewide permabanned so we'll see. Maybe one day, we'll revert back to good old fashion forums or internet relay chat or even newsgroups. The technophiles atleast, the masses probably will be still in their bubble of social media.
That's why we're building the fediverse right now. The enthusiasts have already evolved. No regression necessary.
Well I'm also here 😀
I'd love to see a good enough alternate that I could convince my normie friends to use. I'm sick of moving every time its profitable to shit up a chat platform.
Discord is, but there's no capable developed Discord alternative. The Lemmy/Piefed/Mbin-verse is well developed.
Let me give you my experience with your suggestion. Using reddit for over 10 years. Been through 3 site wide bans and 3 reinstatements all with the same account. During my last site wide ban I really tried to love Lemmy. I can understand less users and therefore less comments and posts. But in my opinion the vibe was worse than reddit. The vibe meaning the majority of us using this platform think THIS WAY and if you in anyway disagree than you are a bad person. I still like Lemmy but I restrict myself to just a handful of groups. In my opinion there are no civil open discussion groups on reddit. And it's the same with Lemmy. The difference is that reddit has a flair policy for some groups that protects groups from the brigading just because you have a different opinion.
You are going about it the wrong way. The ban evasion is not as sophisticated as you make it out to be. Put a VPN or mobile data and create an account with a normal email. Use a normal web browser like firefox. Thats all. Ive been banned like 60+ times. Once you make the account dont comment for a few days and ease into it.
Using tor, vpns, etc makes you stick out. Commenting a ton and being super active makes you stick out. They aren't detecting that it was YOU they banned they are just banning you because you are acting suspicious and botlike.
So do you literally just wait a few days and rejoin some of your favourite smaller subs after a few days no matter how small they are and still remain undetected?
Are you ever connecting to your old IP again after making the account on data or are you being super careful about it?
Also, if the bans aren't for evasion, how are you coming back after 60 fucking times lol?!
After a month I'll stop being careful and use my home IP
Because after I got banned for something so minor I was pissed at reddit and kept I being rude to comments and posts that were shit.
You know how you see the same reddit opinion over and over and over even though its completely incorrect. Or see posts that are so obviously false or rule breaking. I'd just be rude as fuck in my reply tone, not breaking any rules but still would draw bans.
The ones I hated the most were am I the asshole posts where they clearly weren't. Like "am I the asshole for being abused by my parents". Same with firecape posters in the old school runescape subreddit.
So you use the same devices as before just like firefox with cleared cookies? How long do your accs last?
Also sorry for bombarding you with questions it's just I rlly doubt wanna lose the ability to post on some of these subs lol
I dont clear cookies but i run unlock. Accounts last a long time. Ive had one for a while because i spent my time on Lemmy these days. I dont comment on reddit much anymore. Just use it to view. Check your DMS you can habe the account.
reddit detects vpn too easily.
If the VPN has a ton of bad traffic coming from it then you'll get banned. Any free VPN will 100% get you cooked. But i can create an account on the paid proton VPN servers with no issues.
Frankly, I don't understand why people keep insisting on using that cancer site. The Reddit many of us knew and once loved is gone. It is now just another right wing propaganda machine. Sad, but that's the way it is.
That's one of the most irksome things about Lemmy. We create stories as truth without experience when it comes to other countries.
It's one of the only places to talk about some topics
Do you think the DNC/Kamala campaign is right wing because they obviously owned reddit during the 2024 cycle.
i recently heard R/democrat will block/ban any users not pro OLD guard DNC comments, aka pro-schumer,,,etc.
they still have communities on there, sadly its hard to replicate on lemmy or the other sites.
Yeah and that's ironic because they literally call for violence against minorities and they're still there but if you call a right winger an asshole you get permabanned. Reddit is a right wing cesspool, at least to the extent that its owners can make it one.
I thought that's what I just did.
Depends wildly on the subreddit. I'm unaware of Spez personally getting involved in appointing and removing moderators for political reasons. I suspect the user above is referring to site admin policies rather than subreddits.
he got involved during the '23 API changes. just got worst after trump was re-elected.
Yeah, they expelled some mod teams for closing their subreddits in protest - but that's different to what the other user was alleging.
and now people have to be careful what words they are using, like killed, or referring to violence is enough.
Of course. Of course. Right wingers screeching about everything being left wing totally means that's the case, amirite?
Reddit doesn't want you. They want bots -- lots of bots -- and bland people who will absorb what the bots tell them. Reddit thinks it will make money that way. Maybe they're right, who knows? All I know is they don't want us there.
once reddit went public it was writing on the wall at the point. funny they block the mention of the word facebook, because reddit resembles it now.
I had all that happen. The initial ban was from AI for inciting violence when discussing JiuJitsu technique.
Reddit banned my indie game studio account because my coworker logged in on the same computer I was using to comment on our latest trailer.
They said I was switching accounts to boost my post. Then banned my company account, and all the accounts for all my employees.
The more you look into Reddits community rules, the more generic they become so they can make up any excuse to ban you.
There's a currency subreddit that also banned an alt I created years ago for me saying the word "crypto" despite that not at all being listed in their rules. I asked a mod why, and his response was that it was considered "vulgar" language.
So yeah. Reddit will just ban you for any reason, even if you are an active community member or contributer. The site will be unusable in 5 years as the CEO will have IPOd it for max profit and left by then.
I think it's useful in conversations like these to distinguish between bans made by Reddit admins, and bans in individual subreddits due to the actions of moderators (even if sometimes, poweruser mods will sometimes mass ban across all subreddits they are a mod for — this is still distinct from the admin bans).
I find the ban of your indie game studio account to be the thing that annoys me most in your post — that ban is bullshit, and such indiscriminate application of policy that it ends up undermining the stated goal of such moderation policies.
Whilst the bans from individual communities do also annoy me, that feels like a less useful thing to get annoyed at — for as long as there have been people, there will have been people who, upon gaining a modicum of power, abuse it in trivial, ego-serving ways. I think this human propensity is especially apparent on the internet. It sucks, but I also think that the most productive thing to do is to acknowledge the tendency and try to think of ways that we can make communities more resilient to the abusive actions of individuals.
The moderator/admin distinction is one such way, and this is especially apparent on federated social media like Lemmy. Whilst heavy handed admin level moderation is probably fine for smaller instances (such as if someone spins up a server for their friend group), it isn't really viable when things get larger. The best approach seems to be for admins to have an extremely light hand in the day-to-day running of things, rather like a King in a constitutional monarchy.
This inevitably means that sometimes, communities can experience a toxic shift in the culture of the space through the petty actions of moderators, but in theory, people have the power to create a new community, whether on the same instance or otherwise. In practice, this doesn't necessarily happen, because inertia is powerful (plus even when there is the need for a mass migration, such as if the original community is literally no longer available, not everyone ends up switching over to the new space). Power tripping moderators make online spaces worse, and it's not viable to expect admins to regularly step in — if we want the admins to be able to act as a safety net for severe problems (such as the moderator team violating the policies of the instance), then it's useful to preserve the separation between admin and moderator.
One of the reasons I like Lemmy is that it makes me think about problems like this, because the problem of "some mods are power tripping bastards — what should we do about that?" isn't going away any time soon.
Theyre issuing site wide bans solely at subreddit mod's discretion.
I commented on a post by u/babylonianweeb (the mod who's taken over r/anime titties) he was posting as a regular user, without mod flair, and said something to the effect of 'spain should just nuke israel' (over a development in the Gaza flotilla saga) I commented that was a bad idea, and not likely, as spain does not have nukes.
I got a notice saying I had a temp sitewide ban. A couple hours later, this was upgraded to a permanent one for 'promoting violence.'
yea the temp bans are pretty bs now, since they permaban as soon you finished a temp ban. its usually reddit that sitewide bans you, the admins. also mods can contact admins to issue the shadowban/sitewide ban on thier behalf, mods cant ban you sitewide themselves.
If you are a group mod and ban someone from your group why would you give a fuck about a user continuing to use reddit. The other trend is asshole group mods going through a users history and banning them from their group because "they don't like" the other groups that you have joined. They are total douchebags with empty lives
seems the reddits AI moderation has pretty much eclipses mod bans now. most of its done by reddits filter itself. sub bans arnt a problem, as long as you dont try to engage in the same community again with another account. shadowban/sitewide bans are pervasive.
that is really incredible. I actually mod several groups there and have NEVER asked Admins to site wide ban anyone.
they also dont like the sudden switching of a browser to another browser they are not used to like a fork of chrome or firefox. because some of them have anti-fingerprinting, so once they detect yout account on another browser or a device they started banning people.
Reddit already went through an IPO.
That's why it's past tense "IPOd" He's now in the maximizing profits phase. Which is replacing people with bots and bad actors that all guide advertisements.
I think I missed "will have" and read it as "will"
Welcome!
After the detox period, it's quite nice here.
Hope you're going to find, and create (you'll be amazed how easy it is to pop up communities here, and there is no permanan possible) your future favourite communities here!
Cheers
The Reddit of old is long gone. The Mods on most subs are petulant cellar-dwellers. Censorship is off the charts. No thanks.
Did you vape your browser cache? Take anti browser fingerprinting steps? So how do you think they're identifying you?
wow browsers can blow dank clouds now? broooo.
Sorry, I had to :P
Nothing but usage patterns is sufficient but browser fingerprints and IP location obviously makes it easier for them.
I linger on a post from a smaller sub they randomly recommend for 0.2 seconds longer than other posts? They get a little suspicious.
I click a google search link to a post about a hobby I was into on a previous account? They get more suspicious.
They say, "oh look, a dude that's into Minecraft (joined that sub), 3D printing (from google question) that lives in x city and uses Windows. We only have like 10 of those on the entire platform, and one is banned! Let's start suggesting them communities from their old accounts to see if it's the same person."
Then, after you even remotely interact with those older/smaller communities that they fire at you as a test suggestion, they gain more and more evidence until they're very confident it's you. Then boom, evasion ban again.
There's no way around this unless you don't use Reddit for what you want to and only browse r/all or something.
Edit: Yeah, forgot to answer the actual question. All browser cache data is removed. They're doing it with data on what subs I like alone.
Once you're over the addiction, maybe a month or so, you'll enjoy your life better. There's an energy about reddit that you see her occasionally, but not all of the time. It's worse than you probably currently realize.
You're right, I definitely have a serious addiction and I am realizing it more now. This post definitely reads like I've been separated from cocaine, lmao.
It's probably my limited social life combined with the endless scrolling. The fucking reddit notifications from posts and comments sorta filled that void, it's super sad ik.
Breaking the addiction will be a hard adjustment and it's not easy, but I hope I will get over it and I know you're right.
But the ban is also shitty outside of the context of my general usage addiction though even though that's obviously the main factor. Asking general questions about random shit has helped me solve so many problems.
Stick with Lemmy for a bit. It's like a less-overwhelming, cozier, friendlier Reddit.
Reddit AI analyses the content of comments and the sorts of posts the user interacts with, and generates a fingerprint of a user, and ban any user which matches the fingerprint of a banned user.
Hahaha what a fucking waste of money. For the amount of money that they're wasting on using LLMs to analyze content, they could fix the actual root problems that makes their platform suck ass.
google and OPENAI is paying for that DATA. thats why reddits AI moderation is so aggressive. reddit is getting money to have thier data scraped, hence google searches are almost always reddit in the top.
they also analyze the fingerprint of your browser to.
to what? you didn't finish
Now that makes a lot of sense - I got a lifetime ban about 9 months back, got back in 2 or 3 times but within hours I'd get re-banned. That explains why, when I showed up on my regular platforms, (specifically r/palestine), I'd get spotted.
I honestly struggled for a couple of months without reddit, but have now substituted it for the most part with a combination of Lemmy and Mastodon....fuck you reddit, lol!
Blorp dev here. Welcome to Lemmy! Let me know if there is anything I can do to improve your experience. PieFed is also worth checking out. You’ll see all the same content as Lemmy, and PieFed has post flairs. Blorp lets you login to PieFed and Lemmy at the same time.
Thanks for making Blorp, it's my favourite Lemmy app I've tried! And the lack of post flairs is something I've noticed, so I might try PieFed out.
If you want feedback on some more (very minor) things I would love to be fixed, here's a list of things I've noticed:
I posted on the Blorp community yesterday about wanting a "read all" button for notifications (mostly because this post got a lot) so that would be really nice.
Other than that, it's mostly just tiny things. Apparently Lemmy has a backend way to see user karma, so maybe seeing that would be nice to add as an option?
Maybe a button to copy and paste a post's body text on mobile like on Reddit, or even a "save image/video" button? This is really minor.
And maybe an easier way to see the upvote/downvote ratio? (like 87% upvoted as an example)
Maybe this isn't possible for some reason, but would a way to create a community inside of Blorp be possible? I don't know if Lemmy works like that.
Thanks again for making this app, especially the fact that it's on iOS. I hope it's not too much of a time/financial burden because it's great.
(All of this is from iOS by the way)
I started working on mark read. I'm also going to take this as an opportunity to improve marking read/unread in general.
I don't think Lemmy supports karma or intends to support karma. It might be possible to stitch something together, but it would be kinda sketchy. Since you're new to Lemmy, I would just embrace the lack of karma and see in a month or two if you still miss it. I think PieFed has a way of labeling a user’s "Attitude", so maybe that could replace what you're looking for.
Copy is interesting. I'll think about how I would add that.
I was thinking maybe long press to peak at ratio. I would have to see if that's possible. I should also add an option to always show upvotes and downvotes separately.
I would love to eventually support create community in Blorp. For now, this is low priority since you might do this only a few times ever. On the other hand, things like moderation will happen daily. So I would add more moderation features before adding create community.
It's not a burden! I feel financially privileged. At least compared to others my age. Building Blorp is my way to give back. Though I have been trying to make more time for my other hobbies lately, so I've been a little slower than usual.
Anyway, thanks for the kind words! Nice to see a fellow iOS user, as most Lemmy users aren't.
Reddit died for me on the day that they banned me within minutes for saying I should be allowed to punch Nazis, you know in an Indiana Jones kind of way. Or a Captain America way if you prefer. I'm pretty sure the thread had something to do with Captain America so it was relevant
reddits kinda worst now. i sitll browse reddit, even though my account was shadowbanned. and people were saying they cant say certain things now that were very common, and its now bannable by reddits filter.
You did the right thing
I wouldn't even bother, I used the site for 15 years mostly just answering software and tech questions and talking about music gear and they banned me in seconds for one anti trump comment earlier this year. It's fucked. Now I wish I would have stopped using it when they allowed The_Donald subreddit to fester on their site.
when r/technology was getting astroturfed with trump news i was commenting as other people are, about antitrump stuff, temp ban. then suddenly all old accounts were hit with the same permaban. they also fish out old accounts you might not have used in while and ban those, if at any time(on the same device or ip address) you commented on a sub you were banned in.
They banned my alts for just lurking. I never commented a thing. All i ever did was upvote and bookmark on VPN and use the account to access other sites. Such bs
Start your own instances for those that dont exist, we will grow slowly !
vpn isnt going to work anymore, reddit bans most major vpns in general. plus they have definitely increased thier ban evasion detection, besides that they are looking for keywords they deemed doesnt fit the sites narrative, instant delete, or ban.
thier methods of detection usually is looking at your IP, device, its components, the browser, your screen resolution, time and date, fingerprinting. for any similarity.
more advanced methods if you are trying to use other methods IP, like datacenter, they will block of flag the most commonly abused IP datacenters, that uses to rotate around. VPN are so easily flagged by reddit its guaranteed a ban. they will also target genuine behaviour, if your on reddit logged in, are you acting human; posting too fast, or spaamming the same words, style of writing. old inactive accounts and new accounts are extremely susceptible to this type of monitoring.
reddits pratically mostly spam/bots now anyways, they purged way too many users.
the true ban evaders are using paid methods, plus new devices and rotating IP that isnt vpn(mostly mobile proxies), and they are usually using hundreds if not thousands of account at once, and they use this method to market OF or some kind of business they are running, so they can afford it
Seems like this will eventually remove a lot of their active user base. If you comment frequently eventually someone will come rap on your knuckles for some comment no matter how polite you are.
I use a VPN to access Reddit all the time. I haven't once been hit with a block.
hey hey, welcome. I left my account behind after someone sent me a picture of a dead kid on it and reporting it did nothing.
also, I find this post extremely fascinating on a technical level. if you were using a virtual machine with a VPN I wonder how they were getting the data back.
I don't even think the evasion detection is that complicated.
Barring fingerprinting and IP shit, let's say they index every single user that spends more than 25 hours on their site per month to lower computational load relative to if we did every single user.
For each of those users, they might record 10 of their most used "niche subreddits" (those with under 200,000 members, niche because most reddit users are in the non-niche subs so it's not conclusive enough)
From that data alone, if a user happens to be into, say, Golden Age Minecraft, 3D Printing, Stampylongnose, Namesoundalike memes, Drakethetype memes, and be in a Saskatchewan local sub, ON TOP of the account being relatively new, this is enough evidence for Reddit to be 99.9% confident that you're the same user as someone else with that data—and if that someone else with that data is banned, you're gone too!
That's how I think they do it. So, you have to completely change your usage habits on top of all device fingerprinting and IP stuff. Near impossible unless you're not just terminally online (like me) but eternally online.
Seems unlikely that they'd do this just to catch ban evaders? They probably were already doing it for targeted ads, so might as well repurpose it for this, too!
they are looking at more than just IP, DEVICE, and fingerprinting. they are looking at your components, screen resolution , your pattern. also they tend to ban very easily on nebulous tos violations.
This seems extremely unlikely. There is most likely another explanation for what you experienced.
I'll take Things that make your fingerprint unique, Alex:
Chameleon is a nice browser extension (it does some nasty things on sites that do try to assert that you are human, or that is it truly you, and you can get banned or blocked so use it with that in mind) that tries to hide some of those things, but maybe they look for it in your browser and default to other techniques... I understand this has been son effort on your part and that some of the things I listed do not apply to you in your last attempts, but maybe some of the others do. Or maybe this is a signal for you to leave that cesspool, maybe.
If you want to see how big your fingerprint can be: https://amiunique.org/
hey that really worked. Great link
I encourage your enthusiasm for writing and suggest you just forget about the old site. You can bookmark important conversations/announcements. We don’t have all them niche discussions, but folks
such as themcan get fucked.You are still logged in somewhere. You just need a new IP. Everything after that is wrong.
I got permabanned for reporting someone else for calling me slurs and threatening me. My appeal was rejected. Everyone in my household was also banned alongside me.
Since then, I’ve moved to a different country and gotten all new devices. I tried making another account to connect with people in the new area, using a new email address. A few hours later, before I’d made any posts, comments or joined any of my old subs, I was permabanned again for ban evasion. (I had, in fact, only visited subs I’d never been to before, where the majority of posts were even in a different language from what my original account viewed…)
I honestly have no idea how they tracked me, or if that’s what actually happened. (Maybe they have some AI that autobans a portion of new accounts now, just in case?)
Your OS shares info, likely android?
Due to the lower userbase, activity happens in more generic communities.
There's
Then genre communities
It's obviously not as busy as Reddit, but it's still a busy enough place.
![email protected] if you have questions
Can't you tell that reddit doesn't want you on their platform? Stop trying, don't jump through a ton of hoops just to get the "privilege" of using their website. Most of the user replies are bots anyway. Reddit is basically Facebook at this point. The more people they do this to, the less users they have. Soon it'll be a website of bots talking to bots pretending to be humans.
facebook 2.0 basically, and they also blocked the word. only matter of time they want ID verification like FB.
yea there is a way to circumvent it, but usually its meant for people who are doing OF, or link farming(mentioning your business dropping links,,,etc) you have to be use proxies that arnt flagged by reddit along with anti-detection browsers.
theres also warming up(try to act natural on the site). but when reddit goes through purges not even those are safe, reddit eventually finds a way to detect them.
VPN accounts typically get shadowbanned quickly in my experience. You need residential proxies. There’s also a warm up period for accounts where they are soft locked out of certain features like modmail, commenting, creating a community, etc. You won’t be told of these limitations, simply shadowbanned if you try to use them.
I’m not sure about Reddit’s use of device fingerprinting or user behavior heuristics when it comes to detecting evasion.
We are at war. I create accounts daily to send out modmail within my rights. We shouldn’t let admins or even mods sleep. I found it funny one time they blackholed an account so hard it couldn’t even be logged into anymore, then banned the entire username prefix “yoyoyopo” all at once, thinking it would stop me.
Are you ok?
Are you opposed to all content moderation or just reddit specific implementation?
Isn't that just a regular ban?
No you still can log into banned accounts. Just can't participate.
i heard about the proxies, you would have to use it with anti-detection browser to make full use of it, there sa forum where you can purchase private proxies that way reddit doesnt detect the most common or abused ones. warmp up includes human behaviour otherwise they might see your account as a bot.
they seem to trust google email accounts or, the browsers chrom or Firefox. if you are on any of the other forks, they might consider flaggin the account.
This shit is super dystopian.
The data also exists in Lemmy to auto IP ban and also attach your IP and MAC to a cookie.
Same as reddit.
One day, someone will make a community here that is moderated like that.
And thankfully none of us will have to use that bullshit community.
Lol,
Lmao
These practices were implemented on reddit to make moderation easier and to remove accountability.
It will be willingly introduced and implemented by the mods of the larger communities for the same reasons.
Mods here already use automod to ban people with no appeal process.
![email protected]
While I don't like the cookie tracking, device linking, or fingerprinting, that is only a fraction as dystopian as the behavioural tracking like I mentioned.
I lost all my accounts by attrition. I had dozens. Maybe even few dozen.
In spite of trying the rate of replacement was basically zero. As you described it's impossible to make and maintain new accounts.
Take this is an opportunity to wean yourself off reddit. It's worthless anyways.
impossible, with the same ip or device. and people who used hundreds of accounts, have other methods to evade bans, which requires money though.
Welcome to the multi ban club. I got got twice on my main account - once for saying Nazis deserve to be named and shamed (appeal succeeded), and again for saying the mods of r/Cybertruck are losers (appeal failed).
Created another account with a username almost identical to the one I had (kind of a dumb move tbh). It lasted for a year and some change before it got banned for evasion. I was surprised it lasted that long.
Since I created and oversaw a subreddit there for a niche community that I am still very much invested in, I created another account (very different username) a few months after I got banned, let it sit dormant for a few more months (a technique often used by bots but hey, reddit doesn't lift a finger for those things!), then used it on a device I've never used any of my other accounts on, also connected to VPN. So far I have not been banned yet but I have only commented on one subreddit, because I genuinely have a question about a game glitch that I can't find help for anywhere else. I'm going to wait a little longer before going back to my niche subreddit to maybe shake them off my tail.
Otherwise though, I'm not rejoining or participating in any other subs I frequented, nor am I going out of my way to flag bots like I used to do. Reddit is dead to me.
I hope more people over there see the light and choke that hell platform of its revenue and influence.
using a new device is what they dint detect that you were the same user that was banned elsewhere. the current consensus, is "warming up' a new account should not immediately post comments or other, or upvote/downvote or even report. but just let it sit while logged in for a few days, then gradually make 1 post a day and increase it later on. also avoid controversial subjects is a must. oh and you must do it on a new IP and device. otherwise your old device will be immediately detected.
they have more advanced methods of detecting too.
This is more of a recent thing.
Since the API changes, everyone's been pretty much forced to use their first-party app, so they can collect even more data on you. But, even without it, they still collect a comically huge amount of data like how long you hover on a post or how fast you type on your keyboard.
That combined with the seemingly sudden leap in AI within the last 3-4 years has allowed them to employ AI specifically trained to detect evaders.
If you want to keep using Reddit, be careful, because second chances are very hard now!
the human behaviour monitoring is pretty recent, plus they also use googles captcha v3 system to i believe.
reddit has been going hard on anti-musk, anti-israel, and anti-trump comments, even simple words can be considered a ban now.
i had the same thing earlier this year, when r/technology gave me a temp ban, all my other accounts were suddenly hit at once. even if the old accounts was deleted or the ban was lifted Years ago. they hold your past accounts against you.
...and that's why I never sub to any subs. I only peek at the All, and ... rarely comment. Almost never upvote. Usage pattern? Dead.
Why even have an account then?
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If you have to go back for the user base, use a fresh Firefox profile with no extensions except uBlock Origin and Jshelter then combine that with a mobile hotspot without a VPN.
Also, when you create an account, do not use the sign up button in the top right. Instead click a random Reddit thread on Google, then click reply on a random comment and then create the account.
DO NOT use your main email (including Gmail's +1 or exam.ple variants) or phone number.
Same thing happened to me (shortly before the IPO, of course). Reddit had been enshittifying for years, and the blanket ban was the nudge I needed to stop giving a fuck about it anymore.
Being banned from reddit was a huge leap for my mental help. Glad they did me the service
Are you using new reddit or old reddit? I have never gotten hit with alt detection on old reddit.
Isn't that just different front-end? I kinda doubt the detection system itself is different
I just got my only reddit account deleted with no warning a few hrs ago. No email about it, nothing. It was a 3 yr old account with lots of good karma. I never engaged in any discussions that led to downvoting, never called anyone names, etc. I'm too lazy to fight it tho - figure if they don't want me on their site I don't need to be there.
yea i got banned for saying the bpdlovedones abuse support sub was unhealthy by describing how it promotes harmful stereotypes and often has people come together to support eachothers worst delusions about the situation and connect those extreme fears back to being natural behaviour of bpd. i got abused by a partner w bpd so it was specifically something i came at as someone who ended up with my healing process made longer by such unhealthy community members spreading more delusional fears. I then got banned cuz bpdlovedones is run by some pretty delusional people who promote these harmful practices(despite me not being mean or argumentative or anything and preempting everything with my personal experience as well as my psychologist who also already knew about the sub and thought its an extremely harmful place), and i made a new account to still engage and help other abused people like i always had prior. got clocked for ban evasion and just never used reddit again since im always banned and using a vpn etc to keep an account is annoying.
them banning me and refusing to appeal my account led to me getting cut off from a friend in an extremely abusive relationship and addicted to heroin who i was helping to try to escape their extremely dangerous partner who was literally threatening to kill them constantly and beating them up so thats very cool. idek if shes alive now they banned her too later and i tried to make a new account just to msg her. very disappointed that you lose message privileges
This is a fairly interesting story, how do they manage to identify you with (high enough) certainty. People should shudder at the possibilities here. Maybe they track your screen resolution mouse-movement speed and even typing anomalies to detect you.
Yeah, at some point the well was poisoned. Reddit’s systems aren't sophisticated enough to do something particularly complicated.
Something as simple as an IP that they bounced to being banned, because disposable IPs are one of the major uses of user-based vpns, is more likely.
It’s been ages since I’ve used a Reddit account. I wonder if account creation involves subreddit suggestions and OP fell into the exact same ones every single time. Like finding the Buddha, but instead of samsaric destiny, you’re banned
Just go to the library and use their computers to make a new account and post.
when i still had accces to my universities computers, i unknowingly was doing just that, but for a public library its more problematic because you have to use your own devices.
Your library doesn't have computers?
Dude my whole family got banned on Reddit when i got banned. It's a shitty corporation.
It's like crack. Apparently someone spread a meme around of one of their banned account's login info and got a shit load of people banned so reddit unbanned everyone, sounds stupid but maybe I'll try that
Not reading all that bs but fuck reddit. Let those lemmings sit their and be fed bullshit by the teaspoon unable to call others out on their bs for fear of getting banned.