It is growing difficult to keep track of the so-called scandals continually erupting in geek culture. First there was #GamerGate, the opening salvo in the fight against feminist criticism of games and gaming’s male-dominated culture. Then there was #GamesSoWhite, which, depending on who you ask, is either an attempt to call attention to the lack of racial diversity in video games or a demand that game developers abandon their artistic vision to please a mob of PC police.

Now we have #RedditRevolt, a hashtag that originated as an attempt to oust Reddit Interim CEO Ellen Pao over the decision to ban several of the site’s controversial message boards dedicated to specific topics, called subreddits. (Reddit is both a social networking site and an online bulletin board; users determine what content is featured on the front page by voting posts up or down. Currently the 10th-most-visited website in the United States, it has received more than 7 billion page views in the last month.)

The hashtag was most recently revived over the weekend in response to the firing of a popular Reddit staffer, with volunteer moderators shutting down a huge number of subreddits in protest and making entire sections of the site temporarily go dark. In a second piece to follow, I’ll discuss how this most recent use of the hashtag provides so-called consumer revolt cover for what is essentially an anti-progressive agenda. But to understand the most recent turn of events, let’s first consider the original #RedditRevolt.

The protestors behind #RedditRevolt claim to be resisting censorship and championing freedom of speech — for the good of the site’s community as a whole. But the rhetoric they employ reveals their true anxiety: that online spaces previously belonging almost exclusively to young, straight, white men are opening up to other demographics — and even more alarming, the cultures and values of those spaces are starting to shift to accommodate these new participants. Far from protecting free speech, #RedditRevolt is thus actually about maintaining the hostility of certain areas of the web toward people dubbed undesirable, from women of color to LGBT people, and about harassing those who would make virtual spaces truly public by safeguarding the ability of all kinds of people to participate.

On June 10, Reddit announced that it would be banning five subreddits for violating site rules about harassment of individuals:

Our goal is to enable as many people as possible to have authentic conversations and share ideas and content on an open platform. We want as little involvement as possible in managing these interactions but will be involved when needed to protect privacy and free expression, and to prevent harassment … We want to be open about our involvement: We will ban subreddits that allow their communities to use the subreddit as a platform to harass individuals when moderators don’t take action. We’re banning behavior, not ideas.

The removed subreddits violate one of Reddit’s most cherished ideals: the right to privacy and anonymity. One of the banned communities was Fat People Hate (r/fatpeoplehate), a community “devoted to viciously demeaning obese people and denouncing the idea of fat acceptance.” Posts included photos taken from people’s social media accounts and online dating profiles and posting them on the subreddit without their permission. Users deluged their targets’ personal websites or subreddits with cruel comments in a practice known as brigading that is also a violation of new anti-harassment rules implemented this May.

But some members interpreted the ban as an attempt to enforce a new culture of political correctness and warned that it was the beginning of the end of the Reddit community. Others threatened to decamp from Reddit and set up groups on rival websites such as Voat or 8Chan. Opponents of the decision branded their protest messages with hashtags. The most popular has been #RedditRevolt, which focuses on the right to free speech — however unpleasant or disgusting — as a cornerstone of online ethics. But the #RedditRevolt posts expose an underlying fear of becoming irrelevant, a sentiment that drives the broader movement.

After all, Reddit wasn’t always a huge, widely known online entity. When it was founded in 2005 by Steve Huffman and Alexis Ohanian, it was a small community dominated by techie types and largely entrusted with its own administration. It has since evolved into “a major social network with a board and a PR firm and millions of users,” according to The Washington Post. The site thus needed to begin making its moderation decisions with that increasingly diverse set of users in mind. Reddit administrators committed to a new set of core values, including “embrace diversity of viewpoints” and “create a safe space to encourage participation.”