-
4 votes
-
Listening to my neighbors fight
8 votes -
Poor neighborhoods make the best investments
7 votes -
Blow up: How half a tonne of cocaine transformed the life of an island
10 votes -
Community solar is an excellent way to create energy equity–if it’s done right
4 votes -
In the land of hope and grief: An art therapy project in an Alaska Native village helps teens talk about suicide in their community
4 votes -
‘I try to spread the joy’: The trans pastor battling intolerance in the Deep South
11 votes -
How an Aquafresh parody Tumblr got swept up in a hate-speech purge
7 votes -
Tumblr helped me plan my eating disorder. Then it helped me heal
10 votes -
The curious tale of the St. Louis street barriers
5 votes -
A highway runs through it: Inside the push to tear down an Oakland freeway
6 votes -
A retired chef finds joy cooking for his community
6 votes -
Meet Nigeria’s small but growing vegetarian and vegan community
9 votes -
Police are making tone-deaf memes to build community trust
5 votes -
Amazon’s slow retreat from Seattle: Amazon has long fancied itself an urban enterprise. Is its pivot to smaller communities a way to avoid messy politics?
5 votes -
Move back to your dying hometown. Unless you can’t.
28 votes -
The hidden resilience of “food desert” neighborhoods
9 votes -
People left weakened and devastated by California's deadliest wildfire keep dying as hospitals remain overwhelmed
8 votes -
'Trauma is a slow burn': Mormons seek healing as church eases anti-LGBT policy
6 votes -
LGBT people a 'fundamental part of the fabric of rural American communities'
10 votes -
The Baraboo Nazi prom photo shocked the world. The city’s response shocked its residents.
14 votes -
New York’s Orthodox Jewish community is battling measles outbreaks. Vaccine deniers are to blame.
8 votes -
The best $5,929.10 I ever spent: Moving back to the Midwest
12 votes -
The internet's hidden rules: An empirical study of Reddit norm violations at micro, meso, and macro scales
19 votes -
La Pampa: The illegal mining city Peru wants wiped out
11 votes -
"It’s a constant battle just to survive”: Many California wildfire survivors are still homeless months after a historic blaze
8 votes -
Go home to your ‘dying’ hometown
11 votes -
How Google’s bad data wiped a neighborhood off the map
2 votes -
Tildeverse - association of like-minded tilde communities
So we have many communities and everyone gets free *nix shell access, you can ssh into the remote server (mostly ubuntu) and do whatever you want! I mostly go there to talk with other users. It is...
So we have many communities and everyone gets free *nix shell access, you can ssh into the remote server (mostly ubuntu) and do whatever you want! I mostly go there to talk with other users.
It is all old school, we use the command line and there is no gui that you can work with. You have to use the cli for everything you do (easy to learn).
You can -
- learn programming
- make webpages
- make new friends
- play games
- learn more about *nix
and much more.
See https://tildeverse.org to get started. (https://tilde.team/wiki/?page=other-tildes for more tilde servers)
I'll suggest you to join ctrl-c.club or tilde.town and then try other servers. You can make account everywhere ofc. I am ~cyaniventer on tildeverse, see ctrl-c.club/~cyaniventer
Edit: Not related to tildes.net
8 votes -
Turning our garden’s bounty into community
7 votes -
'Re-Imagining Paradise' — Making plans to rebuild a town destroyed by wildfire
4 votes -
This is what the life of an incel looks like
32 votes -
Mountain of tongues: Can a nationalist movement from the internet save the world's most scattered people?
5 votes -
The Kimberley Queen who escaped persecution in Indonesia to find sanctuary in Broome
3 votes -
Remember the person: Effortposting about Tildes and anti-social UX patterns in social media
I've been meaning to make this post for a while, and it's actually going to wind up being a series of several posts. It's kind of a long meditation on what it means to socialize online and the...
I've been meaning to make this post for a while, and it's actually going to wind up being a series of several posts. It's kind of a long meditation on what it means to socialize online and the ways in which the services we use to do that help or hinder us in doing so. Along the way I'm going to be going into some thoughts on how online discourse works, how it should work, and what can be done to drive a more communal, less toxic, and more inclusive of non-traditional (read: non-technical) voices. I'm going to be throwing out a lot of inchoate opinions here, so I'm hoping to pressure test my views and solicit other viewpoints and experiences from the community.
I mentioned in an introduction thread that I'm a policy analyst and my work is focused on how to structure policies and procedures to build a constructive organizational culture. I've been a moderator in some large PHP forums and IRC channels in the old days, and I've developed some really strong and meaningful friendships through the web. So I've always had a soft spot for socializing on the interwebs.
Okay, so that's the introduction out of the way. The main point I want to focus on is the title: Remember the Person. This was the something Ellen Pao, former CEO of Reddit, suggested in a farewell message as she stepped down from the role in the wake of a community outcry regarding her changes to Reddit's moderation practices. The gist of it was that online communication makes it too easy to see the people you're interacting with in abstract terms rather than as human beings with feelings. It's a bit of a clichéd thought if we're being honest, but I think we still tend not to pay enough attention to how true it is and how deeply it alters the way we interact and behave and how it privileges certain kinds of interaction over others. So let's dig in on how we chat today, how it's different from how we chatted before in discussion forums, and what we're actually looking for when we gather online.
Since this is the first in a series, I want to focus on getting some clarity on terms and jargon that we'll be using going forward. I'd like to start by establishing some typologies for social media platforms. A lot of these will probably overlap with each other, and I'll probably be missing a few, but it's just to get a general sense of categories.
To start with we have the "Content Aggregator" sites. Reddit is the most notable, HackerNews is big but niche, and Tildes is one too. This would also include other sites like old Digg, Fark.com, and possibly even include things like IMGUR or 9Gag. The common thread among all of these is user submitted content, curation and editorial decisions made largely by popular vote, and continued engagement being driven by comment threads associated with the submitted content (e.g. links, images, videos, posts). In any case, the key thing you interact with on these sites is atomized pieces of "content."
Next up are the "Running Feed" services. Twitter and Mastodon are the classic examples as is Facebook's newsfeed. Instagram is an example with a different spin on it. These services are functionally just glorified status updates. Indeed, Twitter was originally pitched as "What if we had a site that was ONLY the status updates from AOL Instant Messager/GChat?" The key thing with how you interact with these services is the "social graph." You need to friend, follow, or subscribe to accounts to actually get anything. And in order to contribute anything, you need people following or subscribing to you. Otherwise you're just talking to yourself (although if we're being honest, that's what most people are doing anyway they just don't know it). This means the key thing you interact with on these sites is an account. You follow accounts get to put content on your feed. Follower counts, consequently, become a sort of "currency" on the site.
Then you've got the "Blogs" of old and their descendants. This one is a bit tricky since it's largely just websites so they can be really heterogenous. As far as platforms go, though, Tumblr is one of the few left and I think LiveJournal is still kicking. Lots of online newspapers and magazines also kind of count. And in the past there were a lot more services, like Xanga and MySpace. The key thing you interact with here is the site. The page itself is the content and they develop a distinct editorial voice. Follower counts are still kind of a thing, but the content itself has more persistence so immediacy is less of an issue than in feed based paradigms where anything older than a day might as well not exist. This one gets even trickier because the blogs tend to have comment sections and those comment sections can have a bunch little social media paradigms of their own. It's like a matroishka doll of social platforms.
The penultimate category is the "Bulletin Board" forum. PHP BB was usually the platform of choice. There are still a few of these kicking around, but once upon a time these were the predominant forms of online discourse. Ars Technica and Something Awful still have somewhat active ones, but I'm not sure where else. These also have user posted content, but there is no content curation or editorial action. As a result, these sites tend to need more empowered and active moderators to thrive. And the critical thing you're interacting with in these platforms is the thread. Threads are discussion topics, but it's a different vibe from the way you interact on a content aggregator. On a site like Reddit or Tildes all discussion under a topic is 1 to 1. Posts come under content. On a bulletin board it works like an actual bulletin board. You're responding under a discussion about a topic rather than making individual statements about an individual post or comment. Another way to put it is on an aggregator site each participant is functionally writing individual notes to each other participant. On a bulletin board each participant is writing an open letter to add to the overall discussion as a whole.
And finally, you've got the "Chat Clients." This is the oldest form besides email newsletters. This began with Usenet and then into IRC. The paradigm lives on today in the form of instant messaging/group texts, WhatsApp, Discord, Slack, etc. In this system you're primarily interacting with the room(s) as a whole. There isn't really an organizing framework for the conversation, it's really just a free-flowing conversation between the participants. You might be able to enforce on-topic restrictions, but that's about as structured as it gets.
That about covers the typologies I can think of. Next up I want to delve into the ways in which the UI and design patterns with each of these platforms affects the way users engage with them, what sorts of social dynamics they encourage, and what sorts of interactions they discourage. In the mean time, I'm eager to hear what people think about the way I've divided these up, whether you think I've missed anything, or have any additional thoughts on the ones I put up.
30 votes -
Are certain message boards like Tildes, Reddit etc. social engineering?
The active development of Tildes and the feedback/discussions about features and mechanisms had me thinking. Is the conscious design and moderation of forums for public discourse a manner of...
The active development of Tildes and the feedback/discussions about features and mechanisms had me thinking. Is the conscious design and moderation of forums for public discourse a manner of social engineering?
I know the connotation of social engineering is usually negative, as in manipulating people for politics. But it's a double edged sword.
Most recently I was reading this feedback on removing usernames from link topics and while reading the comments I was thinking of how meta this all is. It's meta-meta-cognition in that we (well, by far the actual developers) are designing the space within which we execute our discourse and thinking. To paraphrase the above example: user identification can bias one's own impulse reaction to content, either to a beneficial or detrimental end, so how do we want this?
The moderation-influenced scenario is a bit more tricky because it can become too top-heavy, as in one prominent example many of us came from recently... But I think with a balance of direction from the overlords (jk, there is also public input as mentioned) and the chaos of natural public discourse, you could obtain an efficient environment for the exchange of ideas.
I'm not sure what my stimulating question would be for you all, so just tell me what you think.
33 votes -
The last generation
7 votes -
RIP Culture War Thread - /r/slatestarcodex's regular thread for debating polarizing issues showed the difficulties and risks of hosting those conversations
39 votes -
Wikipedia editors have been fighting over corn for at least a decade
20 votes -
When a Newton family welcomed a baby who is deaf, twenty neighbors learned sign language
10 votes -
'You don’t know when they will come for us': Marawi's LBGTQ community says no safety in conservative city
8 votes -
Reddit rules and the banning of certain anime communities
21 votes -
Widow, 81, sole resident of remote island disputed by South Korea and Japan
3 votes -
Maintaining trust and safety at Discord with over 200 million people
14 votes -
'If it gets me, it gets me': The town where residents live alongside polar bears
4 votes -
There’s a vanishing resource we’re not talking about - humans are losing our cultural diversity even faster than we’re destroying the planet
27 votes -
The end of the American Chinatown - How renewed interest in downtown living is threatening neighborhoods that long provided a first stop for new immigrants
6 votes -
After two months, the sun rises in the northernmost US town
12 votes -
Conventions and beyond: Protecting our community from predators
3 votes -
Language and identity: Lessons from a unique Afrikaans community in Patagonia
7 votes