Hey all,
I know many of us have avoided Reddit entirely, while others have been working to ween themselves off the toxic bot nest. Speaking for myself, I know I've had a few technical problems whose solutions were only found on Reddit.
The migration dust has settled a bit and it's pretty clear that bots mass migrating subreddits isn't the direction the kbin/Lemmy community wants to go.
I propose that these explicit recommendations be mentioned at signup and as part of the user's profile page:
- If Reddit is the easiest to access or only source of information you're searching for during regular browsing, please consider reposting that information to the relevant Fediverse community.
- Begin these title of these posts with "[RX]" so that Fediverse users know why a seemingly random post has been added.
- Please tag these posts with "RDX" (or "RedditExtraction") and the subreddit name it came from for easy filtering.
- This is especially important for technical and detailed posts, as liberating this information will prevent it from disappearing at a corporate goon's whim, and it helps other users transition off Reddit.
- Use whatever method you prefer for the format of the body. It's more important that the info is extracted than any rigid format be followed. You can:
- Link to the original Reddit post.
- Copy-paste the text, only mentioning the authors' screen names.
- Simply summarizing the info.
General Example:
- You search Fediverse posts for a solution to a computer problem, but find nothing.
- A search from Google yields nothing useful except a post on r/TechSupport.
- Create a new thread on kbin/Lemmy titled:
- [RDX] (the question you searched)
- Description of problem, including why it was hard to find.
- Description of solution, preferably including some indication of time in the original post. (Was this post 1 year old or 10 years old?)
- Any additional information you deem relevant.
- Tags: RDX, RedditExtraction, TechSupport, troubleshooting, etc.
Specific Example:
[RDX] Do PCIE to PCI slot conversion adapters require the PCIE or PCI version of drivers?
I have an old PCI card that I would like to use on a current PC. I've seen adapters that should work, but my particular card had both PCI and PCIE versions released. Which driver should I install, or does it even matter?
Response by u/..... in 2013:
Install the PCI version.
Since the card itself is PCI, that is the "language" the PC needs to speak for it to understand. PCIE should be backward compatible, just not physically compatible.
I performed the steps recommended and it solved my problem.
Tags: RDX, TechSupport, PCI, PCItoPCIE, PCHardware
With proper identification (title or tags), it should be easier to add features to the website and apps for filtering out such posts.
I would be even more helpful if there was an option on the New Thread page that auto-filled some of this info or redirected to a form page with separate entries for each element.
Another, more complicated, possibility would be to include a user editable wiki with each community, with extracted data listed as a section. New entries and notes can be submitted, but require moderators approval. Unapproved entries would still show, but with a warning that it hasn't been approved yet.
Thoughts?
I'm thinking more in terms of syncing and storage. It all depends on how it's implemented. Does each community have a wiki that's synced with individual users' wikis? A separate wiki per instance? How to handle edit conflicts, etc.
You're right that just making a wiki isn't too tough, but in the case of decentralized, editable, moderated content, it's probably different enough to warrant an approach significantly different from a traditional, single site/many edit centralized version.
(We could always temporarily have a centralized wiki and roadmap out the transition later, too.)
Yes, the technical aspects are straightforward, the conceptual ones might need a bit of chewing over.
The way I see it, each community would have their own wiki but an instance could also have its own wiki for FAQs and the like which would then also act as the top level, linking to all the different wikis so it would appear as one cohesive wiki. Admins could edit any page, moderators could only edit their own wikis. You could either have a system to allow users to submit a draft edit or you could do that in a post in the community. Unlike, say, Wikipedia, there probably wouldn't need to be large numbers of edits to a page in quick succession, so community members could thrash out a proposed update or addition in the discussion.
So, for example, I started a Home Video community and so I might want one page for a list of boutique Blu-ray releasers and another for a guide to buying a multiregional Blu-ray player. Over on Reddit I created a list of third party suppliers of STLs for the game Star Wars Legion that was well-received (which reminds me I must copy that over) which could be worth a page. Those pages would tend to be relatively static - only getting an update if a new Blu-ray publisher or STL maker popped up.
There are lots of details to be ironed out if we go the wiki way, which is why I think the tagged route would be the best start. Start getting the data and develop the larger structure over time. Once we need the data to populate the wikis/dbs/whatever, any mod can filter the posts pretty easily.
Other problems I see happening - conflicts between mods on entries, keep or throw out entries when an instance defederates (the c/politics folks might not want the entries on Biden being a lizardman from Nova Scotia, but c/iliketohitmyheadwithbricks does), bad blood if some mods want tighter control over wiki content, syncing when federating impact if larger media elements added, multiple wikis covering multiple topics while there are multiple instances covering multiple topics (multiplicative duplication due to the multiple hierarchies of equal importance), and I'm sure plenty more.
I think we'd need to do that anyway as a stop-gap measure because you could start that right now. If there's a will for it, a wiki could be thrown together quickly but there'd need to be testing and the developers of Lemmy would want to be assured it won't break anything or leave a security vulnerability.
If correctly formatted, the content could then just be scooped up and used to populate a wiki when it arrives.
A lot of those are federation issues in general - for example, the wiki would be clearly part of another instances community, so a post about Biden being a lizard in a humansuit and a wiki entry on the same topic would be essentially the same.
I totally agree on the first point, and might have a response in this thread stating much the same.
On the federation/syncing, I think it might need a more unique approach. Communities already have the problem of multiple posts linking the same article across several instances and communities, which don't sync comments. Making sure the complete wiki for a given community is resilient to instances defederating, shutting down, or vandalizing should be top priority, IMO. I don't know what the solution is, but I think we should be open to it looking different from the basic Lemmy sync setup.
For example, the wiki/extracted posts don't really need to sync as quickly as thread comments. Also, there should be some form of versioning in case of a credentials bug, hack, or intentional mass deletion or vandalism. We could aggregate points of conflict between instances/communities in a topic's main thread/stream/article and assign some for of weighting alongside the choice to continue reading from a particular wiki, which are return to the original thread/stream/article.
So, in the Biden-lizard example, the primary Biden entry that's synced everywhere could have a "Controversy" section with generally agreed on, real issues (like age, which is true for almost all US politicians) and fringe disagreements. Each fringe entry in the list would link to the page synced between instances that subscribe to those beliefs, but that page would not be a part of the larger synced Biden pages' contents. That keeps the lizard lovers' content off the larger, community-focused instances.
I guess I'm worried about conspiracy theories pulling users of the 'realistic' path, while increasing load on dissenting instances. I don't think Biden's a lizardman, so I shouldn't have to host the 12 hour long documentary on it. (We all know he's a reincarnated demon-angel hybrid. Oh, so now you don't agree? Fine, I'll host my 36 part finger puppet reenactment of the situation myself!)
Anyhow, I'm kinda babbling. These are just some general ideas off the cuff I wanted to get out there. I'm not a mod or an admin, so I'm hoping to get the conversation restarted among those with the ability to enact some of these changes. Reddit is still a knowledgebase of useful past discussions, and while new content is great, the more we can pull into the fediverse, the better.
And the name? Lemmywiks.
My job here is done.