nomorebillboards

joined 1 day ago
[–] nomorebillboards@lemmy.world 2 points 10 hours ago (1 children)

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

[–] nomorebillboards@lemmy.world 3 points 10 hours ago (1 children)

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!

[–] nomorebillboards@lemmy.world 2 points 10 hours ago (3 children)

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?!

[–] nomorebillboards@lemmy.world 4 points 10 hours ago (3 children)

lol I don't know what any of these are supposed to mean. Love them for that though

[–] nomorebillboards@lemmy.world 9 points 11 hours ago (1 children)

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.

[–] nomorebillboards@lemmy.world 5 points 11 hours ago* (last edited 11 hours ago) (3 children)

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.

[–] nomorebillboards@lemmy.world 13 points 11 hours ago* (last edited 10 hours ago) (6 children)

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.

 

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.

[–] nomorebillboards@lemmy.world 5 points 14 hours ago* (last edited 14 hours ago) (2 children)

MacBooks are pretty practical. ARM laptops like MacBooks have genuinely ridiculously good battery life; I was genuinely shocked the first time I used one.

Yes, ARM windows exists, but it's clunky and has little support because unlike MacBooks, not all Windows laptops run ARM, so developers have little incentive to make ARM Windows versions their apps.

Did you ever get banned again?