I find a CEO referring to their employees as 'Snoos' to be offputting personally.
I'm sure it's meant to be a fun and inclusive term but the guy is sending out a pretty serious email that ends in, "I am sorry to say this, but please be mindful of wearing Reddit gear in public. Some folks are really upset, and we don’t want you to be the object of their frustrations."
The tone strikes me as weird for this message and I feel like the term 'Snoo' is infantizing at best?
Maybe I'm alone, it just feels super weird to hear that coming from someone with the title of CEO at a company of more than 100 people
Since "redditor" is a community name, it makes sense there would be a different internal/employee demonym and Snoo fits the site as good as any other name might.
The whole letter seems incredibly tone-deaf. calling the protests "noise" is incredibly dismissive of their user base and their concerns. The whole section about not wearing reddit gear outside is an obviously farcical attempt to paint people who oppose this change as violent when they are more likely to be people who never go outside, let alone people who are prowling around with weapons looking for vengeance for API changes.
1. https://www.theverge.com/2023/6/13/23759559/reddit-internal-...
https://www.reddit.com/r/reddit/comments/145bram/addressing_...
You're welcome to take the cynical approach to that, sure, but I've never felt it to be a particularly harmful thing. It's good to have some semblance of a friendly culture, if only to break up the day.
Some people will like it and I'm sure some people hate it. I've never given it a second thought though.
Looking back, that was kind of some heavy body horror for a kids movie.
But yeah, “Snoo” is easily the worst tech company name for their employees I’ve heard. I had no idea Reddit had an internal name for their employees. This is way worse than “meta mates” or whatever Zuckerberg ended up coming up with.
If others bond together from that, I get it now.