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An Introduction to Reddit’s ‘Slave Labour’ Subreddit (medium.com/better-marketing)
13 points by ZeljkoS on Oct 8, 2020 | hide | past | favorite | 5 comments



There is an alternative subreddit, /r/forhire, which tries to enforce higher pay, although there are tons of rulebreaking posts that the mods understandably have a hard time keeping up with.

My only /r/slavelabour experience was in 2014 or so, when I was in high school. Back then most users on it were from the “beer money” community looking for extra cash, rather than people trying to make a living. I picked up a request that was basically light research and data entry into a spreadsheet. The guy had tried to get it done via MTurk but the Turkers hadn’t followed directions well, and there were a few hundred lines left to fill out. I don’t remember actually agreeing on a payment in advance, other than my request that it be in Amazon gift cards. He paid $5 when the work was done, insisted that he’d send the full payment later, then sent some oddly specific amount like $52.23 a week later. Good pay for a couple hours’ work, but it felt shady the whole way through.


> It was only when I realized that one of my clients had his own editing website that everything changed. Turns out, this guy would offer to edit someone’s novel for, say, $2,000. He would then pay me $500 to edit it, then send my work back to their client and pocket the leftover $1,500 for himself. All he had to do was secure the sale and wait for me to finish up the work.

So this guy was selling his reputation for $2,000. If the author would have provided a bad service and the guy would send it to the client without proofreading then that guy would no longer be able to charge $2,000.


Just wait until you find out about what happens to the surplus labor value in capitalism in general...


Here's the nonpaywalled friendly link so the author benefits when you read it: https://medium.com/better-marketing/an-introduction-to-reddi...





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