Reddest has a new feature of privacy that provides users more control over content displayed on their user profiles. The updated by the Reddate on Tuesday allows users to select all their activities, rather than exposing all their activities, instead of exposing all their activities, which clicks on their profiles.
The sequence, which has helped run Reddit’s reputation as an open platform, will remain a default option, and all public posting and comment date will be left visible on profiles until the user decides to prepare it. Many users often develop “throwing” accounts to avoid being identified, because other people can easily expose sensitive information and shameful behavior within their post and comment history – sometimes with viral attention.
A handful of customized options are being developed and access to the Settings menu can be accessed under the “Curate” tab. These include “content and activities” settings that hide all public posts and comments, which directly produced on user profiles, or selectively select posts and comments made in specific subdivile communities. Here is also a “NSFW” toggle that hides posts and comments in the Subards that are flagged as NSFW.
Users cannot choose individual comments or posts to hide from their profiles. These settings will not even hide comments or posts in the subdates in which they were published.
Privacy settings include some painters for community moderators, who often need to review user profiles before taking action against accounts. Moods will have full access to a user’s profile for 28 days when posting, commenting, sending mode mail, request to become approved posters, or request to join a private submariddate. The selected sequence of a user will be honored after 28 days, but if they talk again with the subdue, the timer will be reset.
Reddest is likely to introduce these changes to encourage people to engage with the platform without using throwway accounts-something that makes it difficult for individual users to collect data of interest and interest, then focus on ADS and AI training after IPO. Reviewing the comments on Reddest’s general questionnaire thread, however, some people are afraid of privacy features.
One user commented, “It looks like a bad actor will be able to hide his behavior more easily from the average user.” “Unless you are the mood, you will not be able to see that they are posting misinformation about inflammation in a dozen different subsists, for example. Low transparency is not good.”


