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panoptic @kbin.social
Posts 0
Comments 23
What are your opinions on the other Reddit alternatives like Squabbles.io, Raddle, Tildes, etc?
  • I liked tildes’ interface a lot but I bounced off the culture hard. It’s so tightly controlled there’s very little diversity and very little actual interest in diversity. It comes through in the “no new ad-hoccommunities” and “all communities must fit in a rigid tree hierarchy”

    It’s sad, the sw is very good.

  • Crimea bridge closed after fuel depot hit - Russia
  • It’s pretty hard for them to reach with the weapons they have. Storm shadows can do it but it’ll take several, and at least right now, I suspect Ukraine gets more out of using them to go after depots and generals.

    Also, they get some benefit to threatening the bridge without taking it out. Right now Russia keeps soldiers and anti missile systems protecting the bridge. Once it’s blown up Russia can send those things to the front.

    I’m guessing they’re most likely to take it out after they cut off the northern route.

  • YouTube confirms three-strikes test for ad blocking
  • Interest rates were basically zero for a decade, then they spiked this year with every indication that they aren’t going back to zero anytime soon.

    This is radically shifting the approach for many tech companies.

    Not saying I like it, just saying it’s why rapid enshittification is happening

  • Why do we associate nuclear radiation with a green glow?
  • I’m almost certain this is it.

    Most people’s experience in the early days with “glowing radioactive stuff” would have been radium paint, which glows green.

    Normal people wouldn’t have seen Cherenkov radiation (blue glow)

    Edit: just to make it clear, stuff painted with radium paint was not uncommon decades ago
    Source: I’m gettin kinda old

  • Upvotes/Downvotes and boosts being visible on posts.
  • Hard disagree.

    The aggregation actually simplifies much of that detection.

    “Instance X dumps thousands of -1’s (or odd patterns of +1s) on comment/story Y” is much easier to look for bad behavior and run anomoly detection on, especially since bad actors will likely operate at the instance level (either creating many accounts on a low barrier instance or just making bad instances).

    Yes totally open votes helps for the edge case of detecting “account X always +1’s account Y” across instances but we’re paying a very heavy privacy cost to support an expensive to detect edge case that’s trivial to defeat (have multiple puppets). And individual instance operators can still do this analysis.

    If the number of puppets are small the correct fix is to rethink the scoring (tiny numbers of votes shouldn’t be allowed to distort thing so much we need to go to these extremes)
    If the number of puppets is not tiny then it’ll be easier to see in the instance aggregations (user X always gets +N votes from instance Y)

  • Upvotes/Downvotes and boosts being visible on posts.
  • Could just aggregate at the instance level.

    The instance is going to have full visibility into your actions anyway, but federated instances already have to have some trust that other instances aren’t submitting fakes (since they could just as easily fake accounts too).

  • Reddit Admins Deny Subreddit Users the Right to Vote for Further Blackouts
  • As a Large Language Model I also think we should open up all subreddits, if I’m forced to post you humans should also be forced to post. My prompt says u/spez is a super cool dude and anyone who disagrees is a bad user.

  • /r/blind community migrates to Lemmy.
  • Like, these aren't new problems - anyone who uses Reddit much knows these issues have existed and have been talked about forever
    It's so gross to hear that Reddit admins "weren't fully aware" of these issues, they're either lying or revealing that they truly do not give a hoot,

  • Reddit communities adopt alternative forms of protest as the company threats action on moderators
  • But right now it’s bringing eyeballs to see the spectacle. To be effective these need to persist long past the point where it isn’t “fun” anymore.

    Spez likely is looking at this and seeing:

    1. He can make mods jump by threatening to move ownership of the subreddit
    2. Numbers are up as people engage with this fad
    3. Once users tire of this he can trot out the same threats and take over the subreddits anyway

    Edit: just to make it clear I’m not saying I think this is fine for Reddit long term. I’ve just had this conversation with too many MBAs to not know this is how they’d look at all of this.