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8 votes
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Game of Thrones Season 8 Episode 1 discussion thread
Wanted to start a discussion for us GoT fans and give our thoughts on how the first episode played out and what we expect to come. Please delete if unnecessary/unwanted. This is a spoiler zone so...
Wanted to start a discussion for us GoT fans and give our thoughts on how the first episode played out and what we expect to come. Please delete if unnecessary/unwanted. This is a spoiler zone so you've been warned
38 votes -
Colorado could be the next state to let its employees collectively bargain
8 votes -
Mod annotations for removed comments
I just came across this field of 13 admin-removed comments and frankly it left me feeling rather unsettled. That's a lot of content to just nuke all at once. Contextually, the thread up to that...
I just came across this field of 13 admin-removed comments and frankly it left me feeling rather unsettled. That's a lot of content to just nuke all at once. Contextually, the thread up to that point was genial and non-controversial, so it seems especially odd that there's just this black hole there. What struck me mostly was how opaque the moderation was. There is no indication of what kind of content was removed, why it was removed, or specifically who did the removal or when it happened.
Then I scrolled down and at the very bottom I found what I guess is meant to address these concerns, a comment from Deimos:
Sigh, I saw this thread was active and thought it was going to have an actual on-topic discussion in it. Let's (mostly) start this over.
It's not always clear online so I want to say that I'm not rage-posting or bellyaching about censorship or any of the usual drama that tends to crop up on sites like Tildes from time to time. I trust Deimos' moderation and give this the benefit of the doubt. What I'm actually doing, I guess, is making a feature request about better annotation for removed comments.
Would it make sense to show a note (like Deimos' comment) in-thread at the position of the deleted content? Instead of down at the bottom of the page or unattached to anything relevant? In my opinion some kind of "reason" message should always be provided with any moderation activity as a matter of course. Even if it's just boilerplate text chosen from a dropdown menu.
Also, would a single bulk-annotation for all of the related removals make for better UX than 13 separate ones? I think that would be both easier to read, and easier for Deimos to generate on the backend.
I feel like we may have had this conversation previously, but I couldn't find it. Apologies if I'm beating a dead horse.
13 votes -
Mahavir Jayanti 2019: Date, history, significance of the Jain Festival
4 votes -
Feature request: Use "/t/" in alternative to "~" in the url of a tilde.
My title sucks, couldn't word it better. So, I hate having to use the tilde char. Doing tildes.net~tildes is much harder for me than tildes.net/t/tildes. It would be cool if tildes also supported...
My title sucks, couldn't word it better.
So, I hate having to use the tilde char. Doing tildes.net~tildes is much harder for me than tildes.net/t/tildes. It would be cool if tildes also supported using "/t/". I am not suggesting to remove the "~", but make one redirect to the other.
22 votes -
Fact checking Tesla's "impact report"
4 votes -
A high school expelled a girl for kicking a boy who entered the girls' bathroom to "protest" against a trans student
14 votes -
A big jump for Wolfram Language and Mathematica: Version 12
9 votes -
Insights from new MH370 tracking data
6 votes -
The vanishing of flight 370
15 votes -
The source code for all Infocom text adventures/interactive fiction is now on Github
8 votes -
Keybase ♥'s Mastodon, and how to get your site on Keybase
14 votes -
Suggestion: Notify topic submitters on Topic Log–related changes
I suggest that if a user other than the topic submitter makes a change to the topic that is reflected in the Topic Log (e.g., tag/title/group change), then the topic submitter receives a...
I suggest that if a user other than the topic submitter makes a change to the topic that is reflected in the Topic Log (e.g., tag/title/group change), then the topic submitter receives a notification.
This may or may not apply to topic deletion and/or topic locking—to be discussed.
19 votes -
Disney and the Future of TV
6 votes -
Some high-profile male tech executives accused of sexual misconduct are getting second chances
4 votes -
What are you reading these days? #17
What are you reading currently? Fiction or non-fiction, any genre, any language! Tell us what you're reading, and talk a bit about it. Past weeks: Week #1 · Week #2 · Week #3 · Week #4 · Week #5 ·...
What are you reading currently? Fiction or non-fiction, any genre, any language! Tell us what you're reading, and talk a bit about it.
Past weeks: Week #1 · Week #2 · Week #3 · Week #4 · Week #5 · Week #6 · Week #7 · Week #8 · Week #9 · Week #10 · Week #11 · Week #12 · Week #13 · Week #14 · Week #15 · Week #16
26 votes -
Don’t blame the babies
13 votes -
The legend of Keanu Reeves
8 votes -
Life and death in West Virginia
9 votes -
The logistics of the International Space Station
7 votes -
Far infrared radiation (FIR): Its biological effects and medical applications
5 votes -
State Duma passes law ‘isolating’ Russian Internet
7 votes -
Is coffee essential? Switzerland says no.
19 votes -
Fire at the Notre-Dame cathedral
73 votes -
Comedian Ian Cognito dies onstage – and the audience think it’s part of his act
18 votes -
Het Goede Doel - Iedereen Is Anders (Everyone Is Different) (1988)
5 votes -
Acapulco Zombie Live @ Patio Barrio 13/04/2019
5 votes -
Stopping Homelessness Before It Starts: Could a new social services model prevent a temporary housing crisis from becoming a persistent condition?
14 votes -
Black Midi - bmbmbm (2018)
6 votes -
Exploring the world of e-ink
8 votes -
What are the arguments against letting user data be collected?
It's obviously bad when "real" data like full names and credit card info leaks, but most data companies collect is probably email address and some anonymous things like which buttons and when the...
It's obviously bad when "real" data like full names and credit card info leaks, but most data companies collect is probably email address and some anonymous things like which buttons and when the user clicked.
Nevertheless, such data collection, tracking and telemetry is considered quite bad among power users. I don't support those practices either. But I'm struggling to consolidate my arguments agaist data collection. The one I'm confident about is effects on performance and battery life on mobile devices, but why else it's bad I'm not sure.
What are your arguments? Why is it bad when a company X knows what anonymous user Y did and made money on that info? What's the good response to anyone who asks why I'm doing the "privacy things"?
20 votes -
Does empathy have a dark side?
10 votes -
A lawyer set himself on fire to protest climate change. Did anyone care?
17 votes -
How Atlanta plans to get to 100% green energy by 2035
6 votes -
MLS Week 7: All Matches Discussion
Vancouver @ Chicago Columbus @ Montreal San Jose @ Houston Toronto @ Seattle NYCFC @ MNUFC Atlanta @ New England Portland @ FC Dallas Orlando @ Real Salt Lake DC United @ Colorado Philadelphia @...
Vancouver @ Chicago
Columbus @ Montreal
San Jose @ Houston
Toronto @ Seattle
NYCFC @ MNUFC
Atlanta @ New England
Portland @ FC Dallas
Orlando @ Real Salt Lake
DC United @ Colorado
Philadelphia @ LA Galaxy
FC Cincinnati @ LAFC
NYRB @ Sportland Kansas City6 votes -
The Hoosiers - Goodbye Mr A (2007)
5 votes -
Behind every robot is a human
6 votes -
Announcement of the 2019 Pulitzer Prize winners
10 votes -
Octopath Traveler | Released for PC on June 7, 2019
6 votes -
Julian Assange arrested at Ecuadorian embassy in London
60 votes -
Many Americans are too broke for bankruptcy. A new report suggests some fixes.
6 votes -
The removal of fuel from Fukushima reactors begins, eight years after the disaster
8 votes -
Suggestion for users: avoiding excessive use of acronyms
The internet slang is full of acronyms. Some are harmless and well known, such as "lol" or "IMHO", but others not so much. Tildes is explicit by design, with a preference for clear text labels...
The internet slang is full of acronyms. Some are harmless and well known, such as "lol" or "IMHO", but others not so much. Tildes is explicit by design, with a preference for clear text labels instead of icons. In my opinion, that's a great design choice, and maybe we should take inspiration from that in our communications. On Reddit, it's common to find obscure acronyms. Some subs require glossaries to understand their particular lingo. Sometimes this is necessary, but, in excess, acronyms can be annoying and even excluding, especially for non-native speakers. Because there are situations in which the use of acronyms is required, I don't think there should be a rule on the matter. That's merely a suggestion. What you lovely Tilda Swintons™ think about it?
22 votes -
Army Corp begins hearings on draft EIS in Alaska for proposed Pebble Mine
6 votes -
Last summer, Foxconn announced a barrage of new projects in Wisconsin, but an attempt to check up on them found little except empty buildings and secrecy
10 votes -
The intellectual we deserve – Jordan Peterson's popularity is the sign of a deeply impoverished political and intellectual landscape
35 votes -
Eight books that can help make you a better leader
4 votes -
How heavy metal and Satan gave us this sticker
5 votes -
Compromised credentials for a Microsoft support agent enabled outside access to non-enterprise Hotmail, Outlook, and MSN emails for months
9 votes