Monday 20 February 2017

/r/design subreddit update

Hey, we weren't happy with the quality. As mods, we were constantly removing things that go against our rules. Spam, low quality content, critiques, non-design submissions, etc.

Check out the sidebar for the full list. We don't want /r/design to suck and think it should be curated more, similar to /r/science.

Last week we changed to be approved submitter only as an experient. We’ve had 10 modmail messages regarding not being able to submit. We made about 4 people approved submitters. 6 people were told not to post in /r/design.

There's a lot of other good subreddits people should be participating instead of design.

Here’s moving forward:

/r/design is going to be a lot more stringent, it should be the best place for general industry news, questions, and discussion.

In the next few weeks we'll be releasing a user flair system for professionals and students to prove they're in the industry that will allow them to require less submission approval.

Please let us know what you think is good, bad, and what you would like to see changed!



Great design resource

100 Things Every Designer Needs to Know About People (Voices That Matter) Submitted February 20, 2017 at 03:42PM by julian88888888 http://ift.tt/2m0Hfjw

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