FeatureList

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Revision as of 17:42, 10 February 2014 by Landon (talk | contribs) (→‎Engine Requirements: Lynx compatibility)
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Overview

I'd appreciate if everyone would just start adding or removing things they think need to be in the to-be variant of this site

Rather than isolate the things that slashdot already had (we should be familiar with it), let's just explicitly state what we want to see, with the idea that most of it is a copy or inspired by the original. But we can possibly explain, refine, or restrict our focus to the bits that matter.

General Requirements

What features worked and what features did not work during the lifetime of Slashdot?

  • Feature that worked was the karma system allowed users to voluntarily disable the advertisement, made them feel happy even though it did nothing different for the business.
  • Feature that did not work: Adding a sponsored poll / slashvertising
  • Cool new colour

Engine Requirements

  • Be mindful of bandwidth and the amount of processing done by the server when building any features. One extra character balloons into many megabytes of expensive bandwidth and consumption of server resources. Each feature that bloats a page response or causes the server to process something increases costs--KEEP COSTS DOWN!
  • UTF-8 clean for anything that doesn't end up in a URL (i.e. tags, titles, channel names, user names)
    • Of course, some combining marks would have to be filtered, and the resulting text round-tripped through NFD->NFC to prevent certain types of attacks against users or making text difficult to index.
  • MathJax support both in comments and in submissions
Mathjax is the math rendering engine used on stackexchange and will allow scientific discussion between us (people who read math).
  • Channels (like yro, politics, apple) as first class objects
  • Display user IDs
  • Javascript Optional
    • I enjoy having the comment rating slider for example, but main functionality should be accessible with lynx at the least!
  • Submission queues for all channels with membership at the discretion of the channel owner; being able to submit also implies up/downvoting submissions and tagging
Editors/channel owners only
List of users who can submit
All of my friends (for user journals)
All users with mod status
All registered users
Everyone
  • Articles are also first class objects
Perma-link independant of channel
Articles are tagged by topic(s) as well as channel
Articles are automatically archived
Archive is easily searchable, and should be referenced when submissions are edited.
Articles can be cross-posted to other channels by a channel owner (built into the UI if the editor manages more than one channel)
  • Comment key features
Comments are first class objects, just as before, just like articles
Comments can be edited for a short period of time by owner
HOWEVER: Edited comments get a new ID and it links to older versions in the new one. This detail is made prominent to viewer if a comment reply happened before an edit.
Allow alternate markup options (bbcode, markdown, wiki markup)
Provide a mapping to actual div and styles that will be applied, or HTML equivalent codes
  • Allow moderation in same article that you've posted in; only disallow moderation to your own reply chain.
    • You're obviously not allowed to moderate in your own accepted or posted article (treating all comments as replies)
    • Does "reply chain" include parent? If not, how do we deal with threadjacking:
      1. AC posts first comment on a new article (let's presume it's an upmod-worthy comment, not fristpsot)
      2. I post my unrelated comment as a reply to AC's FP, in order to achieve greater visibility
      3. I downmod the AC to -1
      4. Now AC is invisible to anyone with threshold != -1 (including many with mod points and threshold=0, who would have modded AC up on his own merits)
      5. Unless/until users with threshold=-1 and mod points happen by to rectify things, my comment is now the first thing most users see.
      6. ??? (sorry, can't resist...)
      7. Profit!
      • Actually, not just the immediate parent like I said, but 'all' ancestor comments. Otherwise as step 1.5 I just reply with an AC troll (which someone else will rightfully downmod), then in step 2 I reply to that; now that the original AC first post is my comment's gp, so I can still downmod it.
    • Good point you should be prevented from moderating any children and ancestors of your posts (but sibling chains are still fair game)
  • Moderation
    • I forget who suggested this originally, but in addition to the above constraints, only allow users to moderate a subset of any particular article's comments.
  • Moderation Engine
Moderation tags (default scores)
Mod Up Points Mod Down Points
Interesting +1 Offtopic -1
Informative +1 Troll/Spam -1
Insightful +1 Groupthink (New) -1 (or -0.5?)
Underrated +0.5 (New) Overrated -0.5 (New)
Funny +0.5 (New) Flamebait -0.5 (New)
Devils Advocate (New!) +1 Jibberish (New!) -1
    • Users assign own weights to tags in the range -2.0 -> 2.0 with 0.5 increments
    • System rounds x.5 towards 0 in comment spill / threshold logic, display capped at -1 and 5.
    • A score for the default weights is saved for the comment for use by article spill (for googlebot or "load all comments" from anonmyous user)
    • An optional cryptocoin tipping system, when you like someone's post you can give him a small cryptocoin tip. That might also work as an additional moderating system. Non-moderators could mod-up comments (Insightful, Funny, etc) by eg. 0.5 points by spending some money.
    • What about not-posting in the thread where you moderated? Good or bad rule? Maybe if you really must post, allow cryptocoin paying for post? (eg. "Warning: you have moderated in this thread (or whole story), if you really want to post you need to spend cryptocoin on that" (??)) Not posting in the thread is okay, and much better than disallowing the whole story.
    • I think it would be good to display both the positive mods and negative mods on a comment in a concise form (so you could see that this comment is generally regarded both Insightful.... but also Flamebait)

Moderation strategy

    • Chops instead of Karma
    • Chops are derived from:
      • Articles accepted for submission
        • But NOT articles self-authored on a channel you're an editor of
      • Comments that are replied to by others without a troll/flamebait modifier
      • Positive moderation (as judged by the mod action with respect to their own point value weights... so if they think funny is bad, it counts against you)
      • Positive metamoderation outcome (see below)
    • Registered users that have used the site > [threshold] days, posted > [threshold] times, and have positive chops get moderation duty (possibly [x] mod points per day?)
      • The more chops, the more mod points per day, with a total cap for unused

Meta-moderation

  • Moderates the moderators in a check and balance type system
  • Meta-moderation is available to users that have used the site > [big threshold] days and have > [threshold] chops
    • Metamoderation is not "special", a meta-mod capable user can see a random selection of recent mods at any time and metamod.
    • Metamod takes 2 mod points <==Open for discussion ??
Metamod actions are like moderation actions, you spend modpoints on them. But they are twice as expensive as direct moderation. The theory is that users with more chops (and thus more modpoints to throw around) are more likely to spend some of them on metamoderation.
Alternatively.... Meta-mod should be open to all in good standing for RANDOM comments. Maybe allow burning 2 mod points to meta-mod a specific comment ???
    • Metamod can spend a mod point to "re-roll" and see a new set of random moderations
    • A moderation is undone when it's "score" goes negative. It is "reapplied" when it goes positive. If the score dips to -3, the moderation is removed entirely. Default moderation value should be > 0, possibly 2 ??
    • A user is not rewarded or punished for the metamod specifically.
    • A running total of positive and negative meta-moderations against them is calculated
    • Certain threshold for positive and negative meta-mod counts result in fixed deltas in chops
      • Having >5 positive metamod could be +1 chop score. >10 +2, >20 +3; >3 negative is -1, > 5 is -2, > 10 is -3
    • Your current chops as of more than 4 weeks ago is rolled into a fixed amount capped at 1.5 times the "Excellent" value and 1.5 times the most negative "Worst Poster" value.
    • On a weekly basis a task is run across all accounts that collects chop point actions since the last summarization date forward a week (actions that happened about 3 weeks ago), applies these to the last +4 weeks ago score, truncates it to the ranges above, and stores it in the database with the new summarization date for that user's account.
    • This prevents a user from "banking" actions that give them more chops to only later be a jerk.
    • However it lets you be a bit grumpy in the short term since the value can go above the thresholds when calculating the current display/privs value (query all the outstanding chop actions for this user, add the point values to the historic value, store it for easy reference later, cached for an hour)


Article submission

    • Editor:
      • UTF-8
      • MathJax (mentioned earlier)
      • ability to check links inline during writing the submission. To see how it works just try writing email in gmail. Everytime when you add a link, there's an option right below it to "check link"
    • Encouraging submitting good articles:
      • Everytime when a story gets accepted, the submitter gets a small cryptocoin reward (as we know - very easy to automate this). Since we are very poor (at least at start) we will not pay a fixed amount, but a small percentage of all cryptocoins owned by altslashdot.
      • If a story gets accepted but is hugely downvoted later (think Roland Piquepaille), the submitter must give back his reward to be able to submit a new story. In fact even better if he had to give back a tiny fraction more cryptocoin than he received.
    • To have funds for all that, we could use:
      • That tipping system (mentioned above in moderation), and everytime you tip someone else a very tiny fraction of that tip goes to altslashdot.
      • Also payments from people desperate to post in thread (or story) where they have moderated (if we decide that this feature is useful, and if it is thread or whole story).
      • Failed submitters, who had to give back their reward plus some extra fraction because their story was hated after it was submitted (think Roland Piquepaille) as mentioned above.
      • Also we can simply hope for money from cryptocoin donations address. IMHO that is quite possible if we make this site good.
  • Source standards (should this be spun out into its own page-- Submission Guidelines and Standards ???)
    • Link to most primary source possible.
    • No more linking to fly-by-night blogs or linkbaits.
    • Link to print-version instead of 50-page clickthrough
    • If sites get Soylented, should article links automatically Corel Cache?
      • Would there be a way of switching to a different cache on the fly, for when Corel Cache goes out of business?
    • No more linkbait titles. After Slashcott, will look up that article... but Dice basically admitted they put celebrity names and intentionally misleading subjects to entice people to click through from search engines. This is a scummy horrible practice that needs to go.
      • TFTitle == TFS == TFA