maybe the recent spam wave on #ScratchMitEdu (iykyk, won't elaborate for reasons) will teach #Scratch to actually step up their security game and improve their website to be better again, AND improve their moderation in a way that does not unfairly ban anyone through outdated word filters.
That, or they'll take the easy way out by shutting down the website after 10+ years, and people will be talking about how "nostalgic" it was back then when it doesn't even matter right now. The same people who will simultaneously turn their heads when a website they used to love is now currently enshittifying, whether it's apparent or not, whether it's "just a kids' website" or not.
When you prioritize automated/faulty thinking-based overmoderation over critical thinking and case-by-case analysis of the given allegedly offending content in question, you open the door for people who actively hide their behavior and know how to say all the right things in the public eye as a means to prey on others off camera or under anonymity as someone else.