Yep. It turns out there is no such thing as a 'balanced' social network.
Which is analogous to life, depressingly enough.
Yep. It turns out there is no such thing as a 'balanced' social network.
Which is analogous to life, depressingly enough.
I've always thought about creating some metric to weight users who create comments with the most engagement as higher. That leads to the most controversial or dividing comments rising though.
Some impartial judgement via mod points and or community awards to weigh valuable users would be nice.
The issue is any of these would be gamed, it might be possible today to use an AI model like ChatGPT but that's got its own biases.
So for the moment I can't think of a better system than upvote downvote.
Its a new app, I'm thinking of making my own, not that I think I could do better but just to try work is enough programming though.
Still, I say give it a few weeks. Let the devs get a handle on Android and this explosive growth.
Still need that alert function on the app.
Although all this immature development is making me consider taking a stab at programming Social Networks again. Last effort was an app back in College to collate facebook, twitter, reddit, etc into one interface. Very clunky, held together by proverbial tape and crashed when there were non latin characters input. Still, that was fun.
Well, it's the nature of almost any online community. Say the 'popular' thing and you're lauded, even if a slightly less popular point is more valid / has better evidence.
There really is no good way to discourage this other than fostering a community which values the discourse over 'popular' thing. That's difficult to do even offline.
Hmm, I don't disagree with the fragmentation but that's the nature of any new social platform. It's also been proven out that eventually one or two communities for a topic will become the dominant one with the others falling into disuse.
Attempting to merge communities early or artificially will cause moderator strife as minor disagreements balloon. Especially in a multireddit community where no one mod(team) has absolute control.
I don't have a reason from a technical point of view, but from a social one. Forcing communities and instances together early will only cause strife. After a few years where two communities have a track record and proven 'behavior' would the multireddit not cause issue.
Personally a Reddit is Fun user, but sad to see them all go...
Feels like old school forums again. A little barebones compared to some of the corporate stuff, but that's not a bad thing. Just the simple what's needed no extra fluff.
Always weird to see the passion in these niche forums. it's sad to see it go... Hopefully we get some back here and on other sites,
Less ad money is the big one, but no reddit won't publish that. So it's a stab in the dark.
Before we discuss the Candle and the Ghost. Please.
I have a feeling they got a massive number of those,ni am one of them as well.