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11 votes
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Teddit: A privacy-friendly Reddit frontend similar to Invidious/Bibliogram/Nitter
18 votes -
How do you think software services should be monetized?
A year ago, I asked if people would pay for social media platforms and search engines if they could guarantee no data collection and no ads (although in hindsight, I wanted to ask people for...
A year ago, I asked if people would pay for social media platforms and search engines if they could guarantee no data collection and no ads (although in hindsight, I wanted to ask people for basically all software services) and people overwhelmingly said no. Given how Facebook is dealing with the election and YouTube has taken control of monetization for the sake of more advertisements, I wonder what do people think is the right way for software makers to make money.
18 votes -
Primary Lemmy instance enables federation
13 votes -
Roiled by election, Facebook struggles to balance civility and growth
12 votes -
YouTube Vanced: A privacy-friendly YouTube app for Android with ads and telemetry stripped out
38 votes -
YouTube can now place ads on all videos even if creators don’t want them
26 votes -
Positive Youtube channels?
What are your favorite youtube channels to watch when you're in the mood for something positive and uplifting? No genre restrictions or anything, just something that really oozes the joy and...
What are your favorite youtube channels to watch when you're in the mood for something positive and uplifting? No genre restrictions or anything, just something that really oozes the joy and passion that the creator has.
I'll throw this one out there to start: Bicycle Touring Pro. He makes wonderful, slow paced and positive documentaries about his solo and group travels on his bike around the world. If you ever want to just zone out for a moment, throw this on and you just might be inspired.
25 votes -
Credit-based communication platforms?
Does anyone know of any communication platforms [1] which use a credit system or have a 'cost' attached to actions such as making a post or commenting? I am imagining something like Reddit or a...
Does anyone know of any communication platforms [1] which use a credit system or have a 'cost' attached to actions such as making a post or commenting? I am imagining something like Reddit or a forum where users have a balance, and actions have a cost which is charged against that balance. So if I have 100 credits and posting in r/whatever costs 2 credits/post and 1 credit/comment then that limits the amount of interaction in that sub.
I am wondering if a cost system like this would be useful for moderation or to promote high-value content, since it effectively turns the platform into a market. One effect of this system is that it would discourage low-value posts/replies/comments, because there is a cost associated with making a post, namely opportunity cost of posting something else later. Perhaps the credits are purchased with real-world currency, which I assume would amplify this effect?
I imagine a sustainable system would have some way to reward users of high-value content with more credit so they are incentivised and able to produce more content: maybe upvotes count as credit, or users can donate credit to each other?
[1] I hope this term is vague enough to encompass all forms of modern digital communication. I am curious about direct communication (email, WhatsApp, ...) as well as social media in its various forms (Reddit, Tildes, Twitter, ...), niche platforms (Letter), wikis, fora, and anything else under the sun.
12 votes -
YouTube Terms of Service updated with the “right to monetize”
26 votes -
Open letter from Facebook content moderators re: pandemic
7 votes -
Twitter releases new "Fleets" feature
15 votes -
Reddit quarantined: Can changing platform affordances reduce hateful material online?
4 votes -
YouTube Rewind 2020 cancelled, very likely due to COVID-19
10 votes -
Twitter: An update on the features related to the 2020 US Elections
11 votes -
TikTok can continue to operate in the US, Commerce Department says
10 votes -
How do you describe TikTok? The automatic culture of the world's favorite new social network
5 votes -
Hasan Piker's Twitch stream is the future of Election Night coverage
12 votes -
Targeted by government misinformation, activists in the Phillipines are asking Facebook to do more to tackle a deadly epidemic of "red-tagging"
8 votes -
Evolving Reddit's workforce - Going forward, Reddit employees will mostly be able to work remotely from wherever they want, and all US employees will be paid the same, regardless of location
18 votes -
Does the Reddit 'Popular' page base results on the user's preferences?
I use Reddit more than I should. I flip to the 'Popular' page to see current events. I am curious if I am looking at skewed results based on the subreddits and posts that I visit, or if I am truly...
I use Reddit more than I should. I flip to the 'Popular' page to see current events. I am curious if I am looking at skewed results based on the subreddits and posts that I visit, or if I am truly looking at a good sample of Reddit's popular posts?
3 votes -
The problem with (all) the tech hearings in Congress
7 votes -
Reddit worries it’s going to be crushed in the fight against Big Tech
16 votes -
Reddit announces "Predictions" - Allowing users to bet on the outcomes of polls with Coins (purchased with real money), where moderators are responsible for choosing which option wins
38 votes -
Mobilizon, a free-libre federated events and groups platform has launched v1.0
13 votes -
Facebook's Supreme Court arrives
4 votes -
How Facebook is bringing QUIC to billions
7 votes -
Twitter won’t let The New York Post tweet until it agrees to behave itself
13 votes -
The Motte subreddit had a schism leading to the creation of a new community
4 votes -
QAnon/8Chan sites briefly knocked offline after call to internet provider
15 votes -
Is QAnon a game gone wrong?
14 votes -
Facebook and Twitter take unusual steps to limit spread of New York Post story
16 votes -
Why Facebook can't fix itself - The platform is overrun with hate speech and disinformation, but the company's strategy seems focused on managing perception of the problem instead of addressing it
14 votes -
Facebook account banned within ten minutes of linking Oculus account; decision reviewed and cannot be reversed. All prior purchases are lost. Oculus Quest is unusable.
37 votes -
How to get a "Reddit Experience" for Twitter?
Hey folks, I hate Twitter with a passion and find it very hard to follow discussions because they are so terribly displayed in the official App/Website. Unfortunately I have to use it for job...
Hey folks,
I hate Twitter with a passion and find it very hard to follow discussions because they are so terribly displayed in the official App/Website. Unfortunately I have to use it for job reasons and therefore I am looking for less headaches.
Is there an app which can show me Twitter content and discussion tree views like Reddit does?
I am totally willing to pay.
Thanks in advance for your thoughts.
8 votes -
2.1 million of the oldest internet posts are now online for anyone to read
14 votes -
Facebook is updating their hate speech policy to prohibit and remove Holocaust Denial content
16 votes -
A GPT-3 bot was posting on /r/AskReddit for a week and routinely getting upvoted and replied to
43 votes -
Additional steps Twitter is taking ahead of the 2020 US Election
15 votes -
Facebook, Twitter dismantle global array of disinformation networks
7 votes -
Let's play and win our own game
6 votes -
YouTubers are upscaling the past to 4K. Historians want them to stop
9 votes -
Spritely - A project to improve the capabilities of the federated social web, from one of the co-authors of the ActivityPub standard
8 votes -
The guide to unbundling Reddit
10 votes -
President Trump is continuing his war on Section 230 and the right for the open internet to exist
8 votes -
Twitter to investigate apparent racial bias in photo previews
8 votes -
Everything we know so far about the mysterious and confusing deal between TikTok, Oracle, and Walmart
4 votes -
When you browse Instagram and find former Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott's passport number
32 votes -
6,600-word internal memo from a fired Facebook data scientist details how the social network knew leaders of countries around the world were using the site to manipulate voters — and failed to act
21 votes -
TikTok reaches deal to partner with Oracle, rejects Microsoft's plan
22 votes