Have You Noticed That Reddit Has Been Banning a Lot of Accounts for No Clear Reason?

growthpilots

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Lately, I've noticed Reddit banning a lot of accounts without any obvious reason. Is anyone else experiencing this, or noticing the same trend?

Whats your thoughts about this
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Reddit usually runs ban waves every 3–4 months, Where it removes accounts that it identifies as bots, spam accounts, or accounts Primarily used for promotional activity. It seems like Reddit is currently going through another one of these enforcement waves, which is why many accounts are being suspended at the same time.
 
Lately, I've noticed Reddit banning a lot of accounts without any obvious reason. Is anyone else experiencing this, or noticing the same trend?

Whats your thoughts about thisView attachment 528761
I've noticed the same thing recently. It seems like Reddit has become much more aggressive with automated moderation and spam detection, so even legitimate accounts can sometimes get flagged unexpectedly.


In many cases, factors like posting too frequently, using multiple accounts, sharing links too early, or unusual login activity can trigger restrictions. New accounts are especially vulnerable until they've built some history and credibility.


My approach is to participate naturally, engage with communities first, and avoid looking overly promotional. It doesn't guarantee you won't run into issues, but it does seem to reduce the chances of getting flagged or banned.
 
Yes, I seen that mostly people are saying that, but I do not think it always no reason reddit usually has rules and automated systems and sometimes bans look random from outside.
 
I have also noticed it as well. I see, Reddit has become much more aggressive about detecting spam patterns, vote manipulation, and unusual account activity. In many cases, accounts are not being banned for a single action but for a combination of signals that reddit's automated system flag as suspicious. It definitely feels like reddit is tightening enforcement compared to previous years.
 
Usually something in the acc pattern triggers it, Reddit much stricter with spam signals, multiple accounts, VPN/proxy use, and low-trust activity.
 
It feels like reddit's automated systems have become much more aggressive now.

Some bans are definitely justified, but I have also seen legitimate users lose accounts without any obvious reason. My guess is that reddit is tightening its trust and spam detection system, which can sometimes catch normal accounts as well
 
It’s actually Reddit’s new “Crowd Control” behavior matrix and domain trust scoring.
But now the system isn’t just looking at what you do on your account. It’s looking at how quickly a community can downvote or ignore your first few interactions. Silently, within hours, your account trust score tanks to 0.
 
New account VPN activity and high posting frequency seem most affected appeals sometimes succeed but enforcement feels increasingly aggressive and inconsistent. Yes a growing number of users report reddit issuing automated bans and stricter anti spam enforcement.
 
I think reddit automation catches too many accounts now. even legit behavior sometimes looks suspicious to their filters.
 
It’s certainly clear that there are more reported cases of bans, suspensions, and shadowbans than ever before in the last two years. In my opinion, the reason for this may be an increase in the aggressiveness of automation in terms of moderating and spam prevention measures, considering that they are attempting to prevent bots, AI-generated content, voting manipulations, and mass promotions.

What makes it difficult is the fact that sometimes real people also get affected by such decisions, despite having committed no wrongdoings in particular. To an outsider, a ban may seem like it has come out of nowhere, despite being initiated by automation measures. Whether there are more instances of banning, or simply more people discussing them on Reddit, the site seems to enforce its policies more often than ever before.
 
I dont see a ususal reddit ban wave this sounds like reddit found your footprints or pattern recognition !
 
I think Reddit is trying to protect communities from abuse and spam but sometimes rules can be difficult for beginners to understand.
 
in some locations it is not allow to register/manage reddit accounts using the residential area proxies but could change location to selected geo to register and manage profile without suspend.
new register profile get suspend instant after register approval.
 
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