comment-castles
stacker.news
comment-castles | stacker.news | |
---|---|---|
36 | 9 | |
59 | 392 | |
- | 3.1% | |
9.4 | 9.9 | |
3 days ago | 3 days ago | |
JavaScript | JavaScript | |
MIT License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
comment-castles
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Trust-Based Moderation Systems
Slightly off topic:
I am trying to innovate on moderation systems and I run/code a whitelist moderated forum [0]. You can only see posts and comments from users that you follow. It's a very simple system and there really aren't any gaming vectors. One implication is that if a new user signs up and posts, no one will see it unless they follow. I've actually never used any typical censorship moderation.
[0] https://www.commentcastles.org
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Ask HN: Show me your half baked project
Reddit clone:
https://github.com/ferg1e/comment-castles
https://www.commentcastles.org
For moderation, a user whitelist sits in front of the typical content blacklist, which introduces some interesting properties.
- Comment Castles| Lightweight internet forum.
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Ask HN: Websites that works with old browsers (mid-2000's browser)?
I think my forum should work:
https://www.commentcastles.org
I can't think of anything that would be broken except for maybe the logo which is an emoji character.
- Ask HN: Post Your Startup
- Donโt Build a General Purpose API to Power Your Own Front End (2021)
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You're So Vain, You Probably Think This App Is About You: On Meta and Mastodon
You may want to check out Comment Castles [0] (disclaimer, I'm the creator). There are 50k comments, but I have never moderated anything. Actually, there are no moderation or admin tools built into the project.
[0] https://www.commentcastles.org
- OAuth difficulty with Express
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Test 5
Comment Castles + Reddit thread
stacker.news
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What are the best alternatives that capture the feeling of old Reddit?
https://oddbean.com https://satellite.earth https://stacker.news
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Sites like HN on other topics?
https://stacker.news is the equivalent of HN for bitcoiners and the only one I read daily besides this one...
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Show HN: Pay More, Be Seen
Build something like this https://stacker.news
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Daily Discussion, July 07, 2023
/r/nostr https://stacker.news
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If this subreddit disappeared one day, where would you go to discuss bitcoin?
Stacker News, of course.
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Test 5
Stacker News (Nostr client)
- It's time to talk about this sub's appropriateness to the IPO corporate reddit business model. Perhaps you want to consider scrubbing your contributions to here. We are looking for a new post-reddit home for this facet of collapse awareness. We will keep you posted.
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Daily General Discussion - June 16, 2023
If you know Stacker News there is a similar alternative that works in Ethereum called zsync.
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Ask HN: What are some of the best Reddit alternatives?
I've been checking out some of the reddit alternative software as of late, not so much the many different servers and communities around. Ones I've liked:
Kbin https://codeberg.org/Kbin/kbin-core
Lotide https://todo.sr.ht/~vpzom/lotide
Lemmy https://github.com/LemmyNet/lemmy
Brutalinks https://sr.ht/~mariusor/brutalinks/
Those all (are supposed to) federate. I don't think federation in these communities is always ideal, drive by posting and what not, I think a better approach would be a client that can read your followed stuff from a local list. But some non-federating options are:
StackerNews https://github.com/stackernews/stacker.news
Comment Castles https://github.com/ferg1e/comment-castles
freedit https://github.com/freedit-org/freedit
There are lots more, some are great some not. There have been quite a few posted on this site in recent days. Some communities really just need forums or wikis, link aggregation and content voting aren't really always necessary.
I do believe communities should host their own sites. Some communities just don't have the interest to be viable long term, and Reddit was away to externalize cost so that non viable communities can continue to exist. We see the results of that now, a company that isn't profitable due to bearing costs that nobody else is willing to bear squeezing users to try to stay afloat. This was always a temporary state of affairs. If you can't find a single community member dedicated enough to keep a VPS running, or with large communities, you can't scrounge up enough money from donations or whatever to keep the server running, that community simply isn't viable.
What are some alternatives?
webcrate - ๐ฆ๐ Organize your web with WebCrate, a modern and beautiful bookmarking tool
ForumMagnum - The development repository for LessWrong2 and the EA Forum, based on Vulcan JS
wiredhoo - Project to add wired connectivity to a Wahoo Kick by emulating the ANT+ profile within an emulated ANT USB stick; the host believes it is communicating to a ANT+ wireless device. Broader scope to be an open-source firmware replacement for trainers.
userscript-clean-twitter - Bring back the peace on Twitter
speech - A tool to practice English speaking
hn-search - Hacker News Search
nestflix.fun - A website showcasing nested stories: fictional movies within movies and shows within shows.
sub.rehab - A list of subreddit alternatives
seleneCMSBundle - Add CMS functionality to your Symfony Apps
awesome-forums - List of forum/discussion boards
Alpine.js - A rugged, minimal framework for composing JavaScript behavior in your markup.
nips - Nostr Implementation Possibilities