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Reddit Digest: January 16, 2012

The Stop Online Piracy Act continues to dominate the social news cycle, but there's plenty of other mischief and hilarity to be had on Reddit today.

 

Kevin Collier

Internet Culture

Posted on Jan 16, 2012   Updated on Jun 2, 2021, 10:41 pm CDT

With 30 million unique visitors and close to 2 billion page views a month, it’s safe to say a lot happens on the link-sharing and discussion site Reddit every day. There are more than90,000 sections on the site; a single discussion alone can sometimes attract more than 10,000 comments.

How can anyone keep track of it all? Our daily Reddit Digest highlights the most interesting or important discussions from around the site—every morning.

  • Colorado congressman Jared Pollis became the latest politician to tell Reddit he opposes the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) in an AMA session. hello_moto pointed out why everyone on Reddit should know Pollis: “All you had to do was say you submitted ‘The Internet is for Porn’ into the congressional record and we all would have known immediately who you were.”
  • Speaking of SOPA, rockNme2349 reminded us that “Copyright infringement is NOT theft and is NOT stealing, it is copyright infringement.” (/r/politics)
  • Reddit cofounder Alexis Ohanian is going to be interviewed about SOPA on Al Jazeera’s the Stream on Wednesday. You’re invited to submit a question to be answered on air. (/r/IAmA)
  • A joke in /r/circlejerk was that if a particular post got 10,000 comments, the subreddit would be exempt from Reddit’s Jan. 18 blackout. So one redditor commented 974 times. (/r/circlejerk)
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*First Published: Jan 16, 2012, 12:06 pm CST