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29 votes
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Inside a viral website - An account of running istheshipstillstuck.com
10 votes -
A story about losing $10M on a to-do list startup
@Andrew Wilkinson: This is a story about how I lost $10,000,000 by doing something stupid.Ten. Million. Dollars.Literally up in smoke. Money bonfire.That's enough to retire with $250,000+ in annual income.Here's what happened...
14 votes -
Substack has raised a $65 million Series B funding round, at a $650 million valuation
10 votes -
Ethernet and IP networking 101 (heavily illustrated)
6 votes -
EU antitrust czar and Big Tech's fiercest opponent – Margrethe Vestager has become famous for putting up a fight against tech giants
6 votes -
Why are circuits on boards?
10 votes -
What does your gaze reveal about you? On the privacy implications of eye tracking
10 votes -
Cassette history/trivia: A series of fortunate events
4 votes -
"Why is this subreddit private?" or why some large subreddits are protesting the censorship of discussions about a reddit admin's ties to pedophilia.
38 votes -
Microsoft in talks to buy Discord for more than $10 billion
39 votes -
Firefox 87 released
30 votes -
Multiple US Navy destroyers were swarmed by mysterious 'drones' off California over numerous nights
11 votes -
Engineer reports data leak to nonprofit, hears from the police
11 votes -
Tracing paper - A brief history of the secret plan to track every printed page
6 votes -
Reddit will introduce the option for new users to add their gender identity to their accounts when signing up
21 votes -
Pasco County’s Sheriff must end its targeted child harassment program
11 votes -
Chrome's address bar will default to HTTPS
10 votes -
Hacktivism, leaktivism and the future
5 votes -
Open letter to Richard M. Stallman
22 votes -
Why use old computers and operating systems?
19 votes -
A comparative analysis of security, privacy, and censorship issues in TikTok and Douyin, both developed by ByteDance
5 votes -
Twitter: Calling for public input on our approach to world leaders
14 votes -
Brazil’s consumer protection regulator fines Apple $2M for not including charger in iPhone 12 box
11 votes -
Reddit announces online presence indicators
67 votes -
In movies, why the dial tone after someone hangs up?
6 votes -
YouTube can now warn creators about copyright issues before videos are posted
15 votes -
Nvidia's AI puts video calls on steroids
5 votes -
Popular female biker in Japan revealed to be fifty-year-old uncle using FaceApp
43 votes -
The web's first online bookmark manager
12 votes -
Encrypted messaging app Signal blocked in China
29 votes -
Teen Vogue editor resigns after fury over racist tweets
13 votes -
CEO of Sky Global encrypted chat platform indicted by US
4 votes -
Cricut backs off plan to add subscription fee to millions of devices
13 votes -
Wireless is a trap
31 votes -
Wikipedia is finally asking Big Tech to pay up
21 votes -
title.wma - The origins of Windows XP's welcome music
3 votes -
Can we stop pretending SMS is secure now?
17 votes -
Nvidia confirms they accidentally released a driver that removed the Ethereum-mining limitations on RTX 3060 GPUs, undermining their attempt to make the cards unappealing to cryptominers
25 votes -
A progress update on LinkLonk - a trust based news aggregator
Hey everyone, I launched my little project LinkLonk here on Tildes back in December and wanted to tell you how it has been going and get your feedback/suggestions. New changes since the launch:...
Hey everyone,
I launched my little project LinkLonk here on Tildes back in December and wanted to tell you how it has been going and get your feedback/suggestions.
New changes since the launch:
- The temporary accounts now automatically get deleted after 30 days of inactivity. I didn't have the deletion logic at the time of the launch, but had it implemented about 30 days after launch. Automatic account deletion is quite destructive - removes the account from the database (thank goodness for foreign keys and cascade deletes) and from Firebase Authentication. I'm happy that there were nobugs when I ran it the first time.
- In addition to submitting external links you can now create text posts. The posts are Markdown-formatted (similar to Tildes). One novel thing is that you can post "anonymously". The database has a record of who the author is so the author can delete/edit their post, it's just the name is not show next to the post.
- Comments - each item has a comment section. The comments are ranked based on how much you trust the people who upvoted each comment (as opposed to being pure popularity). This is the same ranking system that is used to rank the "For you" page, but now applied to comments.
- Unlike Tildes, the comments have a downvote button. The downvote does not bury the comment for everyone else. Instead, it makes your trust in upvotes of people who upvoted that comment go lower. So the downvote button effects what you see, not what others see. It is much harder to abuse that button that way. For that reason I feel much more comfortable putting it there. However, there is a second order effect. If you downvote a comment that someone else already downvoted - then you will trust the downvotes of that person. When they downvote some other comment - then it will rank lower for you. In a sense they earn your trust to moderate content for you by identifying comments you don't want to see.
In terms of users, there have been 260 user records created (some from my shameless plug comments on HackerNews). Of those, ~45 rated something - excluding those that were temporary accounts and were deleted. And I think we have 2 regularly active users (excluding myself). In my mind I had 10 as the number of active users that I was hoping to get by the end of 2021. At this rate we may reach it.
I was pleasantly surprised that there have been no misbehaving users. I didn't need to remove any content even once. This lead me to constantly postpone the implementation of a content reporting system. I hope it stays this way for a long time.
The whole idea of a trust based recommendation system is based on having someone to trust. Right now it is the RSS feeds that are generating most of the content recommendations for the active users. But ideally it would be mostly users recommending content to users. I have two priorities for the near future:
- Make the "single-player" experience better so the active users find value already. As an example, I added full-text search through items you liked
- Find more users to improve the "multi-player" experience. One option is to submit a "Show HN:" post on HackerNews. But you can only do it once and I'm not sure I'm ready to use that shot yet.
What do you think I should do next on these two fronts?
If you would like to give LinkLonk a try register with code "tildes" at https://linklonk.com/register. Feel free to comment on this post: https://linklonk.com/item/6347369602224750592
17 votes -
Finnish telecoms giant Nokia is to axe between 5,000 and 10,000 jobs worldwide in the next two years as it cuts costs
7 votes -
A look at search engines with their own indexes
26 votes -
Tim Berners-Lee: We need social networks where bad things happen less
10 votes -
Clubhouse cured my imposter syndrome
8 votes -
Adobe Photoshop’s ‘Super Resolution’ made my jaw hit the floor
22 votes -
Privacy is a commons
3 votes -
On NFTs: They're just a different database
9 votes -
How Facebook got addicted to spreading misinformation
10 votes -
Seeking to capitalize on a growing population that is increasingly less poor, American and Chinese tech giants clash in Africa
5 votes -
The Netflix password-sharing crackdown has begun
18 votes