the caret menu icon should be above the post, not below it
like this
I am opposed to blocking in general and believe they should be replaced with mutes. If you don't like what someone says, mute them so that others can continue the discourse. However, if a block feature absolutely must exist, it should not prevent interactions with content which t
Perhaps this is for SEO? There is a lot of useful data returned from the JSON response that is not in the raw HTML document, so some extensions that work with the raw data will only work on subsequent pages. Is there a way to get the first page to return JSON?
I previously posted this: https://digg.com/digg/IwHunGZ/community-names-shouldnt-be-first-come And here is a good reason why Digg needs to diverge from the Reddit model of claiming community names. A user claimed /republicans and dedicated it to "News and discussion about t
The biggest flaw in platforms like Reddit is that generic, "root-level" community names (like r/skyrim, r/windows, r/hotsauce, r/wholefoods) are handed out on a pure first-come, first-served basis. Whoever grabs the most obvious, broad name first ends up controlling the de facto
the problems with reddit are twofold: 1) the administration (which you seem to be improving upon) and 2) the platform architecture (which you are duplicating 1:1). we need to gravitate away from user-managed communities. this only introduces powermodding and gatekeeping. ditch co
Looks like a Reddit clone with all the potential to carry most of Reddit's worst problems. We need to get away from user-managed communities. No powermods who can decide who is allowed to post. Replace communities with hashtags so that no one can be denied access to any discussio
Roll credits.