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Confession of a former IMDb administrator


Not me. I copy pasted it from CF, where it had been copy pasted from Contributors from a now deleted account:
Actually Jack,if you had gone on the Help Desk yesterday you would have found an admin (whose profile is now wiped) who went "rogue" and explained what has really happened,which I copy/pasted in time:

"This is no surprise whatsoever. I've worked at IMDb (the worst and most discouraging experience of my professional life ) and believe me, the company is a soulless, empty corporate shell that has one goal: to sell advertising. It's not about movies, TV, or being 'guardians of data' - everything is about making money. The entire site is setup to sell advertising, and movie data is simply a means to achieve that. End of story.

The reason IMDb is getting rid of the message boards is simple: they can't be monetised. If IMDb could make money out of the boards, they'd be staying, but there's no cash in it for them, so they're getting axed. The sell-outs who run IMDb will have looked at the 'metrics' (a risible corporate buzzword the Data Team loves so much) and decided that traffic is not high enough for them to make any real money.

It really is that simple. I've experienced first-hand the obsession with metrics, and making money (at the expense of customer satisfaction), and it really is pathetic to behold. No decision is made at IMDb without greed being factored into the equation, and believe me, they will also shut down certain data sections at some point if they get in the way of making money. Forget the fact that the site has compiled 20+ years worth of important data - if one of the sections can no longer be monetised effectively (Literature, for example), they'll just get rid of it.

In financial terms, keeping the message boards live costs IMDb basically nothing, bar the human cost of maintenance, which - when considered in the context of the site's huge annual profit margin - is less than miniscule.

There's no point complaining about it, making suggestions, or suggesting alternate, viable solutions - the hacks at IMDb don't give a toss. There's no money in it for them, so they're not interested. They'll fob you off with the usual hollow platitudes, but make no mistake, the IMDb that people love died years ago. Now, the site is just a shiny, corporate plaything, pimped out by Amazon for the purposes of making money, with greed - not customer focus - being its primary driving force.

One final note: it probably burns IMDb that the majority (over one third) of their users come from China, the audience for which is far less valuable to advertisers than, say, the USA and the UK. Only about 5% of IMDb's users come from the UK, which is ironic considering the site originated in England. But, I digress - this post will, of course, be deleted, but what the hell. I don't care!"

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Fucking assholes.

A Cosmic Experience: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lrStxwFA1MI

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Bunk.

Where do butterflies go when it rains? Who goes around & tucks in the trains?

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Soon after the boards are deleted, they'll notice NO ONE visits their site anymore! And they had it coming!

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This isn't too surprising, or even all that scandalous, that IMDb has to make a profit; it is a business and the server space isn't free. It would be upsetting if the boards weren't costing them anything; they don't really have any human moderators to pay, it's pretty much all automated. Disappointing decision, but it's not evil that they're looking to make money.

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I hope they regret the decision when people stop coming on IMDb.

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Bump

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Thank you for sharing this. Sad.

Please excuse typos/funny wording; I use speech-recognition that doesn't always recognize!

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regardless of whether the quote is from a troll, poser, or an actual disgruntled employee I don't see why the content in the post would be surprising or even needs mentioning.

It is obvious that this is the real reason, or at least part of the real reason, AND there is absolutely nothing wrong with it. amazon is a corporation, trying their best to create profit for their owners.

People like us who pay NOTHING to use an superduper great free service online should never be so entitled as to feel that they owe us anything. We are using other people's money.

Personally I wouldn't mind paying say 10 bucks a month for the site - but I doubt the boards would be very active when the traffic plummeted from such a fee.

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