Reddit status: access issues and outage reports
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Users are reporting problems related to: website down, errors and sign in.
Reddit is a social news aggregation, web content rating, and discussion website. Reddit's registered community members can submit content, such as text posts or direct links.
Problems in the last 24 hours
The graph below depicts the number of Reddit reports received over the last 24 hours by time of day. When the number of reports exceeds the baseline, represented by the red line, an outage is determined.
July 13: Problems at Reddit
Reddit is having issues since 03:00 AM GMT. Are you also affected? Leave a message in the comments section!
Most Reported Problems
The following are the most recent problems reported by Reddit users through our website.
- Website Down (56%)
- Errors (24%)
- Sign in (20%)
Live Outage Map
The most recent Reddit outage reports came from the following cities:
| City | Problem Type | Report Time |
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Sign in | 17 hours ago |
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Website Down | 2 days ago |
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Sign in | 4 days ago |
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Sign in | 5 days ago |
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Website Down | 10 days ago |
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Website Down | 10 days ago |
Community Discussion
Tips? Frustrations? Share them here. Useful comments include a description of the problem, city and postal code.
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Reddit Issues Reports
Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:
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Joe (@c4ncersn4ke) reported@crea_tiffany I used Reddit a lot in the past, and you’re right that it’s better for finding niche content and answers. The problem with Reddit imo is that it’s harder to tell who’s actually a real human user. The connections I’ve made here feel more “human”. But yeah stuff could be better
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☠️ Krimson Khan 🩸 (@SaevireSineFine) reported@begade_suhas He should be reddit and then just shut it down
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8trius (@8trius) reportedOn Friday, I knew my woman was angry at me for something. And the truth is, I was mad at her, too. When we sat down to discuss it, she opened with, “I’m angry with you.” I already knew this, but I realized I was also angry at her as well. So I said, “Yes. And I’m angry with you.” Then, we each proceeded to talk about what made us both angry. By telling the uncomfortable truth, we got to the bottom of what was wrong and it didn’t take 30 minutes before she was laughing and hugging me again, Weeds are easier to pluck when they are small. Anger, fear, jealousy…these are all feelings that it’s necessary in any mature relationship to be able to talk about and listen to each other over to avoid being controlled by them. And in truth I think the Reddit woman was angry at him for the **********, not just the lie.
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Hugo Mata (@hugo_mata_) reportedIf you're starting out building apps: Build >> PRODUCTS << Not communities. Not marketplaces. Not directory aggregators. Create something a user will pay to solve a real PROBLEM. I did that mistake, and I keep noticing a lot of new SaaS and platforms that rely on daily engagement to work, like voting, interacting, submitting something. In reality, most users won't even open your site a second time. Also there are a lot of websites aggregating information spread around the internet. This is one of the coolest things to build, especially if you're starting out, you just ask Claude to build a nice website with good UX and UI scraping the information or creating daily scrapers, listing and aggregating, let's say, the events of your city into one website. Or all sports games happening around. Or list all websites to submit your site when launching a product to get visibility and good backlinks. Anyway, this is all nice but it's also useless, since it will become a graveyard as soon as nobody enters the site for a second time. So keep in mind that X and Reddit exist and don't waste time recreating something they already solved a long time ago. The only way a solution like this would have a minimal chance is if you already have a certain level of influence and audience on these social platforms. But if you are not that yet, let's focus on a PRODUCT that solves a real problem.
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kira (@up2bprettyodd) reportedAnd don’t look up ur period problems on reddit cause you’re gonna see a lot more toilet fetuses than you want to
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Not Me (@_piratebae_) reported@OrwellNGoode Y’all know we all abandoned google search for Reddit search. They did and still have the best solutions for any queries because everyone is working as a group to find the answer while taking each other down in the process for being stupid.
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Positive (@DrTBagger) reported@shub35177 Seen supports players complaining on here and Reddit about how bad supports feel. When in reality they even weren’t. This hot fix patch on the supports side was unnecessary
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Dima T. (@DimasikUSDT) reportedThe Garage That Made $28K in 6 Months: How 17-Year-Old Jake Broke the High School Finance Game September 2022. The Beginning of Manipulation Jake was 17 when he stumbled upon a YouTube video about Ethereum Mining. The channel was called "Passive Income Squad" (2.3M subscribers), and some guy in a black t-shirt was explaining Mac Minis like they were printing machines. "For $499, you get a machine that earns $400-600 a month. Pays for itself in a month," he said, showing a CoinMarketCap graph. Jake didn't sleep that night. He opened Excel and started calculating: • Mac Mini M1: $499 (officially, not sketchy) • Electricity per month per machine: $15-20 • Internet: already have it • Risk: 0 (or so he thought) By morning, he had a business plan scribbled on notebook paper. October 2022. First Purchase. $1,497 Up in Smoke (or so it seemed) Jake sold his old iPhone 11 Pro for $550, borrowed $250 from his best friend Marcus, and convinced his mom to "invest in her son" for $700. Mom agreed ("Okay, honey, but I'm watching the electric bill"). Three Mac Mini M1s arrived in three separate packages. Setup was fanatical: • macOS Monterey (clean install) • Downloaded minerOS—specialized OS for mining • Created wallets on Kraken and Coinbase • Launched the first Ethereum mining script at 23:47 The Numbers: First Month (November 2022) By month's end, his hashrate was 114 MH/s (megahashes per second). Modest, but honest. Hardware earnings: • $12.40 per day (with ETH ≈ $1,150) • $372 per month (minus $45 for electricity) • Net income: $327/month His classmate Brandon worked at Walmart that same month and made $840 total. Jake made that in just 2.5 months, while sleeping. For Jake, this was victory. December: The Moment of Truth. Crash and Burn (or not) Ethereum dropped to $900. Reddit and Twitter exploded: "It's over," "Crypto is dead," "Sell everything." Jake did the math: • At $900/ETH, his income dropped to $240/month • ROI on one machine: now 2.5 months instead of 1 He didn't panic. Instead, he bought two more machines. His friends thought he was insane. "You know, in war, when everyone's scared—that's the best time to buy weapons," he told his mom. Mom didn't understand the analogy but gave him another $500 anyway. January-February 2023: The Garage Expands ETH rebounded to $1,800. But it didn't matter—Jake was thinking long-term. By late February, he had: • 8 Mac Mini (total purchase price: $3,992) • Hashrate: 304 MH/s • Daily income: $33-40 (depending on network difficulty) • Monthly earnings: $990 minus $120 electricity = $870 net The garage started smelling like silicon and the future. March: When School Life Met Entrepreneurship His AP Economics teacher asked the class: "What business would you start at 17?" Half the class said: "Pizza delivery" or "Tutoring on Wyzant." Jake raised his hand: "I already did. I've got a farm of eight Mac Minis. I make $870 a month." The class laughed. The teacher raised an eyebrow but said nothing. During lunch, Kyle—a competitive programmer—approached him. "Seriously? $870 a month?" "Yeah." "That's... that's more than my dad makes at his part-time gig." By week's end, Kyle had two machines in his garage too. April-May: Exponential Growth Jake realized his limit wasn't money—it was physical garage space and electrical capacity. The mining farm required: • 12 kW of electricity (which triggered a call from the power company) • Constant ventilation (installed two industrial coolers for $300) • Heavy-duty shelving from Costco (3-tier metal racks, $180) • Extension cords, power strips, and surge protectors ($400) By late April: • 15 Mac Minis • Total investment: $7,485 • Hashrate: 570 MH/s • Daily income: $52-68 (network difficulty fluctuated) • Monthly income: $1,560 minus $185 electricity = $1,375 net He opened a separate checking account at Chase. Already had $4,100 in it. May: The Turning Point His older sister Olivia came home from college and saw the garage. "Jake, what the hell is this?" "It's my business." "You're making how much?" "About $1,400 a month." She didn't laugh. She Venmo'd him $500 the next day asking for equity. He gave her 5%. June: The Final Round. Garage Transformer Mode Two things happened in June: First: Ethereum dipped hard: From $1,800 to $1,200 per token Second: Jake didn't flinch. He bought SEVEN more machines. "It's simple logic," he told his mom. "When price is low, my dollar income stays stable, but I'm buying machines at a discount on electricity costs. This is a long game." By end of June, the garage looked like a server room. Final numbers for June: • 23 Mac Mini M1 (total cost: $11,477) • Hashrate: 874 MH/s • Daily income: $68-95 (depending on difficulty and ETH price) • Monthly income: $2,040 minus $276 electricity = $1,764 net Over 6 months, Jake made: $327 + $240 + $870 + $870 + $1,375 + $1,764 = $5,446 But this was just the beginning. By early July, he was already negotiating with an electrician to upgrade the main panel in the garage from 100 amps to 200 amps. Cost: $2,400. He paid in cash. July-September 2023: The Spoiler Three months later, his farm grew to 43 Mac Minis. Total earnings for the 6-month period: $28,147. In August: • He was invited to speak on a podcast called "Teen Millionaires" (they turned out to be ex-college kids, but the podcast had 50K listeners) • He received 47 DMs from other high school kids asking for advice In September: • Other juniors and seniors started showing up at his house asking: "How did you do this?" • He started charging $500 for "consulting sessions" • Made another $3,500 that month In October: • His farm made enough money for him to buy a new 16" MacBook Pro for $3,200 • He gifted his mom an iPhone 15 Pro Max • He put a down payment on a 2023 Tesla Model 3 (his dad co-signed) • He invested $5,000 in Kyle's crypto trading bot startup (it failed, but the lesson was worth it) In December: • He graduated high school early • He deferred his Stanford acceptance letter to run his operation full-time Meanwhile, Brandon—the kid who worked at Walmart? Still making $15/hour. The Real Timeline (Month by Month) October: 3 machines, 114 MH/s hashrate, $327 monthly net, $327 total earned November: 3 machines, 114 MH/s hashrate, $240 monthly net, $567 total earned December: 5 machines, 190 MH/s hashrate, $480 monthly net, $1,047 total earned January: 8 machines, 304 MH/s hashrate, $870 monthly net, $1,917 total earned February: 12 machines, 456 MH/s hashrate, $1,100 monthly net, $3,017 total earned March: 15 machines, 570 MH/s hashrate, $1,375 monthly net, $4,392 total earned April: 19 machines, 722 MH/s hashrate, $1,640 monthly net, $6,032 total earned May: 23 machines, 874 MH/s hashrate, $1,764 monthly net, $7,796 total earned June: 28 machines, 1,064 MH/s hashrate, $2,050 monthly net, $9,846 total earned The Lesson Nobody Talks About This isn't a story about "passive income" or "get rich quick." It's about: TimingJake bought when everyone was scared. When crypto Twitter was screaming about the apocalypse, he was filling his garage. LeverageHe used other people's money. Marcus's $250, mom's $700, sister's $500. He never went all-in with his own money. CompoundingEvery month's profit bought more machines. Each new machine generated more profit. Exponential growth. StubbornnessHe didn't sell when Elon tweeted about crypto. He didn't panic when Ethereum crashed. He held the line. MathHe actually did the calculations instead of dreaming. Excel spreadsheets. ROI calculations. Breakeven analysis. ScalingHe knew when to stop talking and start executing. No bragging at first. Just building. The Reality Check His friends played Fortnite. Jake built a power plant. His classmates scrolled TikTok. Jake had a Google Sheets spreadsheet tracking ROI by machine. His peers applied to colleges. Jake was negotiating with electricians. And by the time he turned 18, he'd made almost $30,000—more than his high school teacher made in a year. The scariest part? The only real risk he took was believing a YouTube video. Everything else was just: • Compound math • Electricity rates • Patience • Not panic-selling One Year Later (June 2024) Jake's farm now has 127 machines spread across two locations (garage + rented industrial unit). Monthly revenue: $8,400 Monthly expenses: $1,200 Net monthly profit: $7,200 He hired Kyle, Brandon, and Marcus to help maintain the operation. Pays them $2,000/month each. He's now advising other high school kids on their mining setups. Made an additional $15K from consulting fees. Stanford called asking when he'd be coming. He said: "Maybe. Let me see if I can 10x this first." His mom bought a new car. His dad stopped asking about college. And somewhere in the world, a 17-year-old just watched Jake's YouTube video and is calculating hashrates on Excel right now. The cycle continues. Plot Twist This story is MOSTLY fictional, but the economics? Those are 100% real. The principles Jake used—buying when scared, compounding returns, understanding opportunity cost—these are timeless. The only thing that changes is the asset. Last year it was crypto mining. This year it might be AI startups. Next year it could be something nobody has even heard of yet. The real lesson isn't about Mac Minis or Ethereum. It's about seeing an opportunity, doing the math, and having the guts to act when everyone else is frozen in fear. That's how teenagers become millionaires. Not by following the crowd. But by doing the opposite.
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Alfonso Cardenas (@xMrDmgx) reportedreddit threads from 2014 hit different when you realize half the commenters were arguing about problems that got solved years ago and nobody ever went back to update them
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Shreyas Nalle (@ShreyasNalle) reportedYour email id is literally linked to everything and that's the issue, Your bank account, AI subscription, LinkedIn, X, reddit, job portals, every single thing is linked to your email id If for some reason the email id is banned or blocked then we are so cooked
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ecomchigga (@ecomchigga) reportedat 7:40pm i had no product. by 11:17pm a stranger in texas paid me $19 for one. i've made $1,340 from it since and haven't opened the file once. every minute timestamped: 7:40pm. opened reddit. searched "struggling with" in r/sidehustle, r/EntrepreneurRideAlong, r/workonline. scrolled for 19 minutes looking for the same complaint posted by different people in different words. 7:59pm. found it. same question asked 6 different ways: "how do i actually get my first sale with a digital product when i have zero audience." 300-900 upvotes each. dozens of comments all saying "following" because nobody had the answer packaged. 8:12pm. opened a blank google doc. wrote the answer like a long text to a friend who just asked me at midnight. no outline. no headers. just the answer start to finish until the answer was done. 9:28pm. finished. 14 pages. messy. read back like a voice note someone typed instead of recording. 9:34pm. organized it. added section breaks and 3 screenshots of real dashboards showing the steps working. cut 2 paragraphs that were just me performing credibility i didn't have. 14 pages became 11. 9:48pm. cold pizza break. stared at the wall for 6 minutes questioning whether anyone would pay for this when half of it exists in scattered reddit threads. decided the scattered part is the whole problem and the assembly is the product. 9:54pm. exported as PDF. opened canva. free template. typed the title. changed one color. exported. total design time: 4 minutes. it looked exactly like a cover made in 4 minutes. 10:03pm. created the product page. uploaded the PDF. one-sentence description: "how to get your first digital product sale with zero audience." priced at $19. not $9 because single digits feel worthless. not $39 because a stranger with no proof doesn't get to ask for $39. $19 clears without a testimonial. 10:14pm. went back to the 6 reddit threads. answered 3 questions with real detail. not links. real answers. mentioned the guide in a reply when someone asked for more. link on my profile. never in the comment. 10:29pm. posted one tweet about the problem. not about the product. the tweet described why most people never make their first sale. link in the first reply. 11:17pm. phone buzzed on the couch. $19. texas. someone i'll never meet bought an 11-page PDF i wrote in my underwear 3 hours ago. that was 4 months ago. same file. same cover. same price. $1,340 and i haven't opened the google doc since that night. meanwhile someone in my DMs last week said they're "almost ready to launch." been almost ready for 8 weeks. they have a notion board, a color palette, and a logo they paid $200 for. product doesn't exist yet. page one hasn't been written. 3 hours 37 minutes. $1,340. the cover still looks like it was made in 4 minutes because it was.
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GTMnow (@GTMnow_) reported.@veelarco, co-founder and GP at Premise, on why the old go-to-market playbook is broken and what founders should do about it: Mid to late stage companies are feeling it hardest. Especially in DevTools. "The old go-to-market playbook is not the thing a lot of people need." When they go to hire, they do not know who to hire. The CMO from a similar company knows the old playbook. Not the new one. And nobody can agree on what the new one even looks like yet. Her answer is that it has to come from the founder. "Someone on the founding team needs to be nerding out on what it takes to win distribution." Reading Reddit. Following growth hackers on X. Whatever it takes. Because the moment there is a playbook, everyone has figured it out and you are spending your way there instead of growth hacking your way there. "Now is this exciting moment in time where there's not a lot of playbooks. Which means you don't need a lot of money to break out."
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Becky (@Becky15114922) reported@MrAndyNgo Well there a little late on Mitch. He died weeks ago. If the hill ever stops gaslighting the public. Reddit seems to be a platform that should be shut down. Looks like a breeding ground for lunatics
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Ponch (@PonchatoYT) reported@LugarCinema This was honestly one of the worst movies I have ever seen, and I've watched a LOT of movies. Just terrible, cringey, reddit slop. Absolutely awful.
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Justin Watson Enjoyer 🇺🇸🇺🇦🇲🇲🇵🇸 (@Jamesthehamez12) reported@Lothric961 @spacecowgiirrl Reddit is down the hall and to the left sir
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Yun Shi (@stefanibershi) reportedI created an AI that quietly benches financial creators based on their performance, watching 300 plus of them. I've been constructing this for roughly a year. The algorithms of my feeds began banishing people because their great power rewarded whoever shouted loud enough, not whoever was right. And in the moment, you can’t tell them apart. Thus, a group of agents are observing makers across YouTube, X, Reddit, Substack and Medium, plus profit calls, news and congressional trade filings. On an average day, over a 100 thousand of signals are generated but proposed only that few which matter and can actually work. Essentially, every public call is timestamped and checked against what the market actually did. If a person doesn’t pull their weight, they are dropped from the team. I never put out rankings, nor do I publicize any track record. Just one thing which I put out; it’s whose judgment survived. At present, there is a pool of 300+ verified creators running 24/7. Choose a group of investors or one of your own choice and read on stock or run their frameworks in-depth. I am posting because I want the methodology to be examined, not validated. I’m having some trouble here. Timestamp bias: if a “call” is buried 22 min into a video, pinning when it went public is harder than it sounds. What would you do about it? Makers erase their poor opinions. To what extent should I worry about archiving? What does it mean for something to be a “call” when half of them are hedged or vague? Where would you begin if you wanted to break it? The code isn't open source. However, I have extensive note on the vetting pipeline and can elaborate on it. It is a research and learning tool, not a signals service. Nothing it outputs is advice. Glad to assist The same flag as before if you’re in favor of the product, a majority of trading subs want you to say so, or else it gets removed as astroturf. Do you want it even shorter?
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purpleveins (@purpleveins02) reportedIf u feel sed or tensed, just hop on to some confession page on reddit ... u will forget ur problems
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amolitor.dolt (@amolitor99) reported@DrFrancisYoung it's perfectly normal. this is just twitter/reddit imagining an education system that mostly does not exist, abetted by endless grifters who want to sell solutions to this problem that largely does not exist. just an odd corner of the outrage machine
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S.M. Elly Avi-Sniffman (@AviSniffmann) reported@thesamparr Silly story If he bought Reddit, it would not have became success that it is today. Probably would've been similar to Google buying Slide then shutting it down
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amolitor.dolt (@amolitor99) reported@TheLincoln only on Twitter and Reddit. this is mostly a made-up issue.
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Elicia ⚢ ཐི༏ཋྀ (@Elicia_111) reported@YurifulReiTeto They do this so the sub doesn’t get shut down so many troons sneak into that sub to do mass reports especially when they feel ******** aren’t “inclusive” so mods just get hella paranoid about most posts I used to post on Reddit in that sub so ik what you’re dealing with 😭
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Rio Kanzaki (@SydneyC75073684) reported@awndrezawndrez @D3bv Reddit is down the hall and left
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Mewt (@therealmewt1987) reported@reddit_lies After everything that gay little imp has done to destroy our country, I don't have a problem with Reddit acting like this just this once.
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harsh (@__harsh020__) reportedReddit used to be one of the best places to get genuine feedback and discuss what you're building. Different opinions, real conversations, and people who actually care about the problem space. But lately, it's become really difficult to post anything meaningful. If you share what you're building, it's instantly called "promotion" and removed. If you ask genuine questions about the problems you're facing while building, it's still seen as self-promotion and taken down. It's getting painful. I genuinely find X better for these kinds of discussions, but the reach here is much lower. Has anyone else been feeling the same lately or am I doing something wrong?
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Not who you think it is (@notworthitok) reported@DiwakarMadugula @RepNancyMace "masterclass in adulting" Reddit is down the hall and to the left *****
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berserk415 (@Berserk710415) reported@xint3ger @Lampontheapp @IGN God you people are slow there’s a whole sub Reddit and YouTube videos about people complaining about it and you just assume I’m not one of them. Are you that dense?
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perfectlyimperfect🦋 (@LilyGermaine93) reported@pervertite Whatever you do don’t go on Reddit.😬 They loved the ep. No problems whatsoever in their eyes.
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Junior (@Bldinsilence) reported@roninmma_ @calebrozar @BearsShowYo Ok well A move = the mechanics, not the grip Changing the grip without changing the mechanics doesn’t change the move If you want to agree to disagree on that thats fine But being super disrespectful to randoms online isn’t black belt behavior and doesn’t reflect well on you, it just makes you sound like a blue belt with self control problems And reddit is not a real jiu jitsu authority lol
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Gordon_925 (@Gordon_0925) reported@danielCELlK dctwt did and still does the same **** though this aint a reddit problem
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kyle (@rfxkairu) reported@max_spero_ modern reddit has a big issue with people attacking the person via looking through profiles rather than debating the content of the original post/comment. it's turned into a bit of a ******** post-2016