Patrick O'Keefe

@patrickokeefe
774 Followers
768 Following
1.2K Posts

20+ years in online community, moderation, trust, and safety. Plenty of work in retention, news, streaming, and product, too. You can hire me!

Ex-CNN. Mentor, NEW INC. Host, @communitysignal. Author, Managing Online Forums. He/him.

Based in Hollywood, California. @patrickokeefe on Twitter.

#OnlineCommunities #ContentModeration #TrustAndSafety #Product #ProductManagement #Author #Cmgr #CommunityManagement #CNN #NewsProduct #Moderation #Community #Hollywood #LosAngeles

About My Workhttps://patrickokeefe.com
Podcasthttps://communitysignal.com
Thanks to @chrispian for flagging this to me initially.
We're living through what I regard as a fairly dark time for online communities, but we have to do our best and focus on our goals and our members. We'll be alright. In many ways, we're the antidote.

6. Manipulation in online communities has been a thing since the start. Whether it's government actors trying to sway public opinion, autocrats targeting the opposition, or Scott Adams pretending to be a fan of Scott Adams, it's been going on.

The only thing that AI changes is the believability, quantity, and speed at which this can happen. All of which, it has impacted dramatically.

5. Bad AI-related things are absolutely happening in many online communities. We should do what we can to limit it, but don't let it eat you up. Ultimately, the fault of these things rests with bad actors - not on the community operator doing their best. When you see it, do what you can. I think the mods of r/changemyview deserve credit here.

4. This is just a good overarching example of the biggest problem people have with LLMs: A lack of permission. It is pervasive in this space. A lack of permission or opt-in is disregarded in the interest of expediency and profit.

Reddit, the company, has engaged in efforts like this by signing deals with AI-focused companies to train on Reddit data - with no participation from the community members who contributed that data.

3. Fake accounts are always fake accounts to me. Reddit was founded on bad principles, where Alexis Ohanian and Steve Huffman would create fake accounts, pretend to be real people, and allow others to form a relationship with those fake accounts so that they could profit.

I don't care whether it's AI or the site owner with 20 accounts, it's all dirty to me. When people make excuses for doing so, it is simply an effort to launder bad faith behavior. Don't fool around with people.

1. Online communities are never fair game for emotional exploitation. One of the absolute worst sins you can commit in an online community is to lie about something that is deeply harmful or meaningful to an individual.

Example: The researchers had an AI comment pretending to be a sexual assault victim.

2. Online communities are very open to research. But that begins with permission. I have approved and rejected many research requests in communities I have operated over the years.

Researchers at the University of Zurich spammed the r/changemyview subreddit community with AI-generated comments in an effort to prove that LLMs could be used to persuade people to change their views. They did so without permission from Reddit, the moderators of the subreddit, or the members who were emotionally manipulated through their interaction with the comments.

A few points to follow.

https://www.reddit.com/r/changemyview/comments/1k8b2hj/comment/mp4vgcm/

#Reddit #UniversityOfZurich #Research #OnlineCommunities #Forums #CMGR

"A federal judge is raising alarms that the Trump administration deported a two-year-old U.S. citizen to Honduras with 'no meaningful process,' even as the child’s father was frantically petitioning the courts to keep her in the country."

https://www.politico.com/news/2025/04/25/us-citizen-deportation-donald-trump-00311631

#USPol #Trump #Immigration

For years, they've invested money and time into developing shoe lines to serve this market, only to see the production costs arbitrarily balloon. They offer free shipping for orders over $150 and a 90 day return window for unworn shoes.

Even if you aren't the customer, I'd appreciate you sharing the post for those who might be! Thanks.