Mirroring reddit posts is so incredibly annoying
Electronics
Projects, pictures, industry discussions and news about electronic engineering & component-level electronic circuits.
Rules
1: Be nice.
2: Be on-topic (eg: Electronic, not electrical).
3: No commercial stuff, buying, selling or valuations.
4: No circuit design or repair, tools or component questions.
5: No excessively promoting your own sites, social media, videos etc.
Ask questions in https://discuss.tchncs.de/c/askelectronics
I think mirroring questions and requests for help is a terrible idea, no one is going to want to answer a question here if most of them are mirrored and the original asker is not here to get the answer.
It's frustrating to put out a well thought out answer then realize that the person who asked will never see it.
A manually curated mirror of interesting Reddit posts that are self-contained, would be useful. But a bot just mindlessly copying and pasting everything would push us away
If you see something interesting on reddit... just post it here, problem solved.
It's not just about the links, it's also the discussion threads from "self" posts.
See point #3 of my list. The particular clever thing about the tool is that it is not using one single bot account to mirror the content, but it actually creates a mirror account for every poster and commenter who participates in the discussion. This is showing some interesting advantages:
- The conversation "feels" organic.
- It makes it possible for the reddit user to "take over" the mirror account, which helps conversion.
- (WIP) It allows two-way conversation between lemmy and reddit, which for the niche communities will tend to favor lemmy (As in, conversations started in Lemmy happen only in Lemmy, but conversations started on reddit will be both on Lemmy and reddit)
How about we give this a go for a couple of weeks? This community in particular is pretty much inactive anyway. If people feel annoyed by the mirrored posts or think that is detrimental to the community, I can disable them again.
If you get a great Reddit bridge working bi-directionally. More power to you. I took a look at home lab right now, there's a ton of post but no comments. So I'm not sure it's there yet.
This is what I'm seeing...
Yeah. That looks great. Just not what I'm seeing on my instance, maybe I need to update?
Pretty sure I read before that those counts do not include federated instances and only represent user/subscriber count on the instance you're viewing from.
I'm not looking at the statistics. I'm looking at the different posts in the community. And they're all empty for me. I open them up and they're still empty.
If no one at your instance subscribes to the community, you won't see the updated data. If you subscribe to the community, you'll be seeing the posts/comments as well (provided the instance is federating properly)
Subscribing did it. Nice bridge. If it's bi-directional then that's amazing. Bring a lot of activity into Lemmy
If it’s bi-directional then that’s amazing.
What's the long-term anti-blocking plan?
Different people run bridges for different communities? So it's difficult to track down all the different bridges?
Multiple bridges is the short-term plan. The real long-term plan is to bring enough people to the fediverse to the point reddit is obsolete and the bridges are no longer necessary...
Isn't working or loading for me.
Your doing good work, you should have some crypto (xmr, etc) donation addresses on your GitHub page
I don't have a website there, I do need to find the time to put it up.
I've added an Ethereum address on the github sponsors page, but honestly the best way to help me is by subscribing to communick. 5 bucks a month will give you access to 10 mastodon accounts, which you can then share with your friends. It helps me to fund the operation and it helps overcome the issue of network effects.
Rather than mirror reddit posts here, you can set up a dedicated community for that so people that want that kind of thing can get it. No need to kill an existing community further.
That's exactly what I am doing for lots of communities that have no reddit equivalent, and what I did for !main@selfhosted.forum when it was clear that !selfhosted@lemmy.world was already somewhat active. Regarding these, go take a look at the usage numbers for both, tell me which is going up and which is going down...
If there's more activity on Reddit then here, then Reddit repost bots make it feel like all the community action is happening on Reddit. They push people back to Reddit because that's where all the new posts are coming from, so why engage here if the active discussion is already in progress over there?
Communities with >50% repost content are unsubscribed by me. If I have communities spamming my timeline with reposts, I just block em. Having to open at least two link and read the content on both sites just to get the info and understand the discussion/context is generally a huge waste of my time.
I am giving you real data: the communities where the mirrors are active end up with more organic activity than those without.
Interesting. I've mostly seen communities overwhelmed with bot posts and 0 replies, but I haven't taken any statistics.
Bit they're giving you real data.
No, they made an assertion, without statistics or raw data to back it up. How many replies do cross-posts get, compared to regular posts? What's the mean? What's the median? Does the distribution look Gaussian, and if so what's the standard deviation.
I was being sarcastic. I always forget the /s.
Interesting comments all round. Let's run with the discussion for a week to allow infrequent visitors a chance to comment and then see if there's a strong trend towards a specific opinion.
After 9 days, the upvotes and downvotes are tied so nothing changes for now, but we can revisit later.
Personally, I'd prefer organic growth rather than reposting stuff from Reddit.
Spread the word about the sub!
I greatly prefer the occasional original post with actuall engagement to a flood of reposts. If I want reddit posts, I will go on reddit (and also get comments and things like that). On a more meta level, the only way a community can gain and retain users is by offering unique content. If 99% of content is just content from Reddit (with missing comments), why should anyone bother to use Lemmy?
Subscribing to a comunity does not cost anything, very few people will leave a community because it is dead, but people will leave a community that spams their feed.
Sorry, your comment is just rehashing all the arguments that I had in many other discussions:
If I want reddit posts, I will go on reddit
The idea is to not give more traffic to reddit and to help people get out of it. By having the content mirrored here, not only we have a method to consume the content from there, we also ensure that the majority of people (a.k.a, the 90% of lurkers) can find on Lemmy the content they are used to consume from Reddit, thus facilitating the migration and fueling network effects.
with missing comments
My system also mirrors the comments, so you won't be missing anything.
but people will leave a community that spams their feed.
I'm not talking about mirroring posts from communities that are super popular. The idea is to get the content from the long tail of niche communities. There won't be a "flood" of spam because we are talking about communities that have a handful of posts and comments per day.