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18 votes
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App/browser extension idea if it doesn't already exist: likely bot database
I just finished reading I hate the new internet post, in which the OP stated: Every social medium is just bots. The front page of Reddit is easily 35% easily detectable bots at least and who knows...
I just finished reading I hate the new internet post, in which the OP stated:
Every social medium is just bots. The front page of Reddit is easily 35% easily detectable bots at least and who knows what the rest is comprised of.
Why couldn't we create a bot database, which I imagine would work similarly to uBlock for ads? There would be a number of signals to attempt to classify users of social media sites (likely human, likely bot, etc.) in addition to user-provided feedback ("I think this person is a bot" or "this account is me -- definitely not a bot").
An extension could then be attached to the database to provide visual changes to social media platforms ("WARNING! LIKELY BOT!") or simply hide bot posts/comments.
Off the top of my head, some bot signals:
- Posting known duplicate posts with political motivation (e.g. on Reddit you see the same exact post about how the tariffs will create a stronger America by different posters) [strong indicator]
- Usernames that follow the lazy bot format, e.g., Pretentious_Rabbit_2355 [weak indicator]
- Usage of AI-generated or ripped off profile pictures, post images, etc. [strong indicator]
- etc.
On the crowdsourced side, there would have to be some rules in place to prevent profile bombing, etc.
All in all, I could see something like this adding a bit of human value back to the various social media platforms AND I would think it would lead to higher advertisement click rates (bots will become less valuable over time on a given platform and decide to invest their resources elsewhere, while "human" user engagement increases at the same time).
If this concept already exists, I apologize. I only did a very quick google.
15 votes -
The disturbing tweets blowing up Emilia Pérez’s Oscars campaign
20 votes -
Swearing and automatic captions
23 votes -
Feminists facing resistance in China find the funny side of things
13 votes -
Bluesky advertises itself as an open network, they say people won't lose followers or their identity, they advertise themselves as a protocol ("atproto"). These three claims are false.
39 votes -
What are your favourite let's plays?
Do you have any favourite videos / playlists (or the rare cases of writing with screenshots) where someone plays through a whole game while supplying their own commentary in an entertaining and/or...
Do you have any favourite videos / playlists (or the rare cases of writing with screenshots) where someone plays through a whole game while supplying their own commentary in an entertaining and/or informative way?
33 votes -
Screen time and face-to-face conversation
8 votes -
[SOLVED] How can I hide streams from my YouTube subscriptions page?
Picture explanation: https://i.horizon.pics/tWovRax4kh.jpg When I view my subscriptions page on YouTube, half the "videos" are recordings of completed streams, often 2+ hours in length. I'm not...
Picture explanation:
https://i.horizon.pics/tWovRax4kh.jpg
When I view my subscriptions page on YouTube, half the "videos" are recordings of completed streams, often 2+ hours in length. I'm not interested in watching these. For me, they're just pollution in the feed.
Apparently, a lot of the channels I subscribe to, whose videos I enjoy watching, also stream on YouTube a lot.
Second Wind is probably the channel I'm most hung up about. I like their normal videos, and don't want to unsubscribe from their channel, but jesus they stream two or three times a day.
(Also, it's annoying that when I view a YouTube channel, I can visit their videos page or their streams page separately. Why can't I have this same separation on my own subscriptions page?)
(Also also, I already use an extension to hide shorts (among other things), but it unfortunately does not have a feature for hiding streams.)
Fancy bullet point summary:
- I want to hide recorded streams from my subscriptions page
- I don't care as much about hiding active livestreams, because those don't pollute my subscriptions page nearly as much
- I do not want to unsubscribe from any of the channels I follow. That is not an option
- I'm willing to stop using
youtube.com
in favor of an alternative client (web, desktop, etc) if that client supports hiding recorded streams from actual videos - I'm willing to install a browser extension that can solve this problem (but I can't find one for Firefox)
Ninja edit:
While writing up this topic, I actually found my own solution. The browser extension I mentioned earlier has an "advanced blocking" feature that takes a JavaScript function as input. The extension's GitHub page has an issue, with a comment, with some code to hide streamed videos on the subscriptions page.
However, that code didn't work when I tried it. Thankfully, I just needed to check for
videoRenderer
instead ofgridVideoRenderer
.Here's the updated code:
(video, objectType) => { // Only videos on the Subscription page if ( objectType === "videoRenderer" ) { if ( video.hasOwnProperty("badges") && video.badges.includes("live") ) { return true; } if ( video.hasOwnProperty("publishTimeText") && video.publishTimeText.indexOf("Streamed") != -1 ) { return true; } } return false; }
I have no idea what the consequences of checking against
videoRenderer
instead ofgridVideoRenderer
might be, and right now I'm too lazy to find out. This works well enough for now.(The "consequence" might be that streams are hidden from the related/recommended videos in the sidebar of a video page? I actually hide that sidebar, so I wouldn't know. Oh, and they'll probably be hidden from a channel's streams feed.)
It isn't a perfect solution though. Streams that are "scheduled" still show up on the subscriptions page. However, I think channels can set streams and videos as scheduled? So blocking one without the other would be more complicated?
I welcome any feedback or improvements on the code.
15 votes - I want to hide recorded streams from my subscriptions page
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Is it possible to filter out posts or comments with Twitter links?
I would like to see if I can filter out Twitter posts (and comments) from my feed on Tildes. I personally don't want to further engage anymore with the site and I've blocked the URL using ublock...
I would like to see if I can filter out Twitter posts (and comments) from my feed on Tildes. I personally don't want to further engage anymore with the site and I've blocked the URL using ublock so would be good if I can pre-emptively filter the site. There's not a huge traffic but I'll do what I can.
30 votes -
Addison Rae took over TikTok. Now she’s coming for pop.
5 votes -
Having a hard time understanding how minds.com makes money
came across the minds.com social media space and I am very intrigued but I am having a heck of a time figuring out how it makes money. I'd like to use it more but if it's the same as...
came across the minds.com social media space and I am very intrigued but I am having a heck of a time figuring out how it makes money.
I'd like to use it more but if it's the same as facebook/insta/twitter and just makes money via outrage and scraping and selling user data, that's a non-starter for me but I can't actually tell what their revenue stream is?
4 votes -
Marvel Snap has also been banned in the US following the TikTok shutdown
31 votes -
European Union orders X to hand over algorithm documents
51 votes -
TikTok is coming back online after US President-elect Donald Trump pledged to restore it
27 votes -
TikTok makes app unavailable for US users ahead of ban
54 votes -
Donald Trump says he'll 'likely' give TikTok a ninety-day extension to avoid US ban
19 votes -
US$ 30 million to reinvent the wheel (Bluesky vs. Mastodon)
24 votes -
US Supreme Court unanimously backs law banning TikTok if it’s not sold by its Chinese parent company
48 votes -
Read.cv and Posts sold to Perplexity; will be closed soon
11 votes -
The making of Community Notes
14 votes -
US President Joe Biden won't enforce TikTok ban
31 votes -
The trouble with Elon Musk
47 votes -
MeroChat is a open source website that helps you to find people to chat with
15 votes -
Revisions of ‘hateful conduct’: what users can now say on Meta platforms
58 votes -
Another post about bulk deleting content from Reddit
Is there a utility that will bulk delete threads and comments I made, but from 1 subreddit only? Thanks for any clues.
16 votes -
Mark Zuckerberg defends Meta's latest pivot in three-hour Joe Rogan interview
24 votes -
The making of Minecraft
9 votes -
TikTok says it plans to shut down site for US unless Supreme Court strikes down law forcing it to sell
38 votes -
Do our dogs have something to tell the world?
8 votes -
Facebook is censoring 404 Media stories about Facebook's censorship
45 votes -
UK users: Lobsters needs your help with the Online Safety Act
24 votes -
Meta is ending its fact-checking program in favor of a 'community notes' system similar to X
40 votes -
Meta scrambles to delete its own AI accounts after backlash intensifies
44 votes -
The Scoville levels on the Hot Ones sauces are misleading
29 votes -
Pinterest alternatives
Seems to be a common subject online that pinterest sucks. I've found so many threads of people asking for alternatives...but I've yet to find a replacement, or really recommendations. I've been...
Seems to be a common subject online that pinterest sucks. I've found so many threads of people asking for alternatives...but I've yet to find a replacement, or really recommendations.
I've been trying out the site cosmos.so, Interesting concept but it is limited by the lack of android and Firefox plugin support
Any suggestions? What I am looking for is a tool that I can use to save stuff I find online, links, images, screenshots. Preferably open sourced or privacy friendly, but at this point I'll take anything lol.
I feel like there has to be something out there!! Not sure why I am having such a hard time finding it. Any recommendations would be appreciated
11 votes -
You make friends *HERE*?!
No, really. Sincerely putting this out there. Using Tildes sometimes feels like talking into the void. The UI, even in Three Cheers, is minimal. The conversations sometimes clinical, though I...
No, really. Sincerely putting this out there.
Using Tildes sometimes feels like talking into the void. The UI, even in Three Cheers, is minimal. The conversations sometimes clinical, though I greatly appreciate the compassion that comes through here versus other places that shall remain nameless.
Yet I am struck. I've seen people here, more recently, cite meeting other Tildans (Tildaniens? Tilwhoseits?).
As a somewhat reclusive 51 year-old married dude with only furry children, I don't get it. But I do know that I need more friendships. It gets harder, as you get older. (As for me, not keeping toxic friendships from school and later 2 decades working remotely led to, well, this.)
So how do you connect with humans as humans here? How do you "make friends"?
Asking as someone who has a diagnosed potent ADHD and perhaps other as yet medically undetermined NDisms.
(No idea what tags to use for this. Help?)
67 votes -
Anthony Bourdain used to post on an internet forum. This is his profile.
25 votes -
German authorities find large chat groups focused on exchanging advice re how to effectively drug and rape women
25 votes -
Bluesky's growing pains
19 votes -
Bridgy Fed, a project to connect the open social web, is now becoming a nonprofit
15 votes -
For folks who use both Twitter and TruthSocial, I am curious, how is the experience difference?
Since Musk took over Twitter and made it a "free speech" platform, something that has interested me is has that basically render TruthSocial obsolete or is there some niche that Trump is targeting...
Since Musk took over Twitter and made it a "free speech" platform, something that has interested me is has that basically render TruthSocial obsolete or is there some niche that Trump is targeting with TruthSocial that Elon is not with Twitter?
The biggest obv difference is just the reach with Twitter having more people than TruthSocial but with all the headlines I see about how people are leaving Twitter en-masse, I figure it's just a matter of time before it loses mainstream attention?
But beyond the number of users, it is basically the same environment, albeit with different tech stacks?
12 votes -
Never forgive them - On digital platforms vs users
35 votes -
More than 140 Kenya Facebook moderators diagnosed with severe PTSD
18 votes -
Sweden's government considering imposing age limits on social media platforms if tech companies find themselves unable to prevent gangs from recruiting young people online
20 votes -
BuzzFeed sold 'Hot Ones' studio for $82.5 million to consortium including First We Feast's founder, host Sean Evans, Crooked Media, Mythical Entertainment, and Soros Fund Management.
15 votes -
The gossip trap - How civilization came to be and how social media is ending it
23 votes -
Trans refugees turn to TikTok and Instagram for help fleeing red states
22 votes -
Social media algorithms can change your views in just a single day
16 votes -
Australia’s social media ban and why it's not cut and dry
Australia’s proposed social media ban is deeply concerning and authoritarian. It's disturbing to see how much of the general public supports this measure. Prominent organizations, including...
Australia’s proposed social media ban is deeply concerning and authoritarian. It's disturbing to see how much of the general public supports this measure.
Prominent organizations, including Amnesty International, the Australian Human Rights Commission, and Electronic Frontiers Australia, have voiced significant concerns about this legislation:
Amnesty International's Explanation of the Social Media Ban
Australian Human Rights Commission on the Proposed Social Media Ban for Under-16s
EFA's Critique of the Social Media Age BanAustralia has a troubling history with internet legislation. Noteworthy examples include the Australian Internet Firewall under Stephen Conroy and Malcolm Turnbull's infamous statement, "The laws of mathematics are very commendable, but the only law that applies in Australia is the law of Australia," regarding encryption backdoors.
While I recognize the issues with social media, "don't feed the trolls," along with maintaining online anonymity and implementing parental controls ( no phones with unfettered internet access ), should work. This law indiscriminately punishes all Australians for the missteps of a few, potentially leading to increased identity theft through phone and email scams and causing older family who are not tech literate to lose connections with their families due to the complexities of government-issued tokens.
Adults will be the ones who are going to be most impacted by this legislation.
The scope of this law is extensive. The Online Safety website suggests that this is merely the beginning, with plans to cover the entire web, including games, adult content, and more. The consequences are profound: the erosion of true anonymity and increased risk to government whistle-blowers and journalistic sources.
Requiring individuals to provide their identity to a third party to access the internet, which many have used freely for decades, is alarming. It threatens to sanitize search results and revoke access to purchased games if users refuse additional identity verification measures. There are no grandfathered exceptions, highlighting the law's intent to de-anonymize the internet.
Although Australia lacks a constitutionally protected right to free speech, this law poses significant risks to whistleblowers and marginalized youth in remote communities. Instead of banning access and creating allure through prohibition, we should address the root causes of why younger people are drawn to such content.
Once entrenched in law, any opposition will be met with accusations of perversion or indifference to child safety, compounded by the spread of misinformation. We must critically assess and address these laws to protect our freedoms and privacy.
There wouldn't be speculation if they defined how they intend the law to work. Instead of a "don't worry about it we will work it out", give people something to say that's not so bad and I can live with it
15 votes