[HN Gopher] Minus
       ___________________________________________________________________
        
       Minus
        
       Author : fredley
       Score  : 632 points
       Date   : 2021-09-06 18:10 UTC (1 days ago)
        
 (HTM) web link (minus.social)
 (TXT) w3m dump (minus.social)
        
       | batch12 wrote:
       | It would be interesting to have a network with a time bank like
       | BBSs were. You get x time every Y hours to read or comment. It
       | would be like noprocrast but not configurable. I think I may make
       | it...
        
       | [deleted]
        
       | mikesabat wrote:
       | It strikes me as strange that "Social Networks" assume or
       | differentiate based on "social media". Social networks moved from
       | connecting people to posting to create an inventory where ads
       | could fit. It seems like removing the posts from a social network
       | could be an interesting unlock.
        
       | thomasjudge wrote:
       | Gimmick.com
        
       | a9h74j wrote:
       | Read a bit, good idea.
       | 
       | Will be followed by some copycat's Minus++, which will be
       | montetized.
        
       | andreygrehov wrote:
       | In an effort to get people to look       into each other's eyes
       | more,       and also to appease the mutes,       the government
       | has decided       to allot each person exactly one hundred
       | and sixty-seven words, per day.            When the phone rings,
       | I put it to my ear       without saying hello. In the restaurant
       | I point at chicken noodle soup.       I am adjusting well to the
       | new way.            Late at night, I call my long distance lover,
       | proudly say I only used fifty-nine today.       I saved the rest
       | for you.       When she doesn't respond,         I know she's
       | used up all her words,       so I slowly whisper I love you
       | thirty-two and a third times.       After that, we just sit on
       | the line       and listen to each other breathe.
       | Jeffrey McDaniel, "The Quiet World"
        
         | vincnetas wrote:
         | Thats why some languages started to join multiple words to one
         | word. Like German (Schifffahrt), Russian (Belenergoremnaladka)
         | or Lithuanian (Daugiaaukstis). I'm sure more languages has
         | this.
        
           | [deleted]
        
         | rataata_jr wrote:
         | I get the poetic license part but why the hell can't she text
         | back?
        
           | jovdg wrote:
           | The poem is from 1998; while slowly getting in fashion, cell
           | phones were still on the rare side (at least where I live)
        
         | systemvoltage wrote:
         | Beauty is best served with a tinge of melancholy.
        
           | echion wrote:
           | > Man was made for Joy & Woe
           | 
           | > And when this we rightly know
           | 
           | > Thro the World we safely go
           | 
           | > Joy & Woe are woven fine
           | 
           | > A Clothing for the soul divine
           | 
           | > Under every grief & pine
           | 
           | > Runs a joy with silken twine
           | 
           | Blake
        
         | animanoir wrote:
         | this is great. thank you
        
         | weinzierl wrote:
         | This reminds me of the _" The big word factory"_ interactive
         | story, where words must be bought (or found) in order to say
         | them. It is a very well made and extraordinarily beautiful app
         | for small children.
        
           | grokx wrote:
           | Originally, it is a nice book for children.
        
         | spoonjim wrote:
         | Wonderful
        
         | saagarjha wrote:
         | I always wondered why the poem wasn't one hundred and sixty-
         | seven words long. Perhaps this was all he could save for us.
        
           | dredmorbius wrote:
           | Or the other 42 were for us to give the ones we love.
        
             | Frost1x wrote:
             | Sounds like the point would be to keep the intrigued reader
             | wondering what the significance or meaning was by leaving
             | 42 or 'n' words--what is it that was of similar importance
             | the author didn't share with us but used elsewhere, etc.
             | 
             | To keep things interesting, you have to leave openings for
             | the imagination to wonder.
        
             | Zensynthium wrote:
             | 42, is it a coincidence that this is also the answer to the
             | universe?
        
               | Arch-TK wrote:
               | This keeps getting butchered. Now it's "answer to the
               | universe" which was previously "answer to life the
               | universe and everything".
               | 
               | It's actually "the answer to the ultimate question of
               | life the universe and everything". The fact that there's
               | an answer to a question but no indication of what the
               | question is is literally the underpinning theme running
               | through all the HG2G books.
        
               | owisd wrote:
               | The books themselves are inconsistent on "answer to life,
               | the universe and everything" vs "answer to the ultimate
               | question of life, the universe and everything".
               | 
               | "O Deep Thought Computer," he said, "the task we have
               | designed you to perform is this. We want you to tell us
               | ..." he paused, "...the Answer!" "The answer?" said Deep
               | Thought. "The answer to what?" "Life!" urged Fook. "The
               | Universe!" said Lunkwill. "Everything!" they said in
               | chorus.
        
           | wizzwizz4 wrote:
           | 42 words remain.
        
             | hoseja wrote:
             | That's the Answer.
        
               | flerp wrote:
               | But what is the question?
        
               | fit2rule wrote:
               | The question is, "What is God's Phone Number?"
               | 
               | Even Deep Thought mentions it ...
        
               | stonecharioteer wrote:
               | You are.
        
           | mysterydip wrote:
           | That was just a poem? I wanted to read more! I guess it's
           | fitting, though.
        
         | ComputerGuru wrote:
         | This was the first comment I favorited on HN, many years ago.
        
           | zarzavat wrote:
           | It really is the unofficial poem of HN.
        
         | EllieEffingMae wrote:
         | I first encountered this poem on a pamphlet handed out at my
         | uncles funeral. It has remained one of my favourite poems of
         | all time.
         | 
         | When I was younger it read as a sad poem about loving someone
         | more than they love you. Now that I'm an adult, it feels more
         | like a similar vibe to what I experience when I save the energy
         | to make dinner for my partner when they get home from work.
        
       | streamofdigits wrote:
       | Love this. People are craving a different social media experience
       | or at least quite a few articulate and imaginative ones do.
       | 
       | But while the failure of the current crop is evident (well not in
       | terms of shareholder value), what should be a "good" replacement
       | is not all that obvious. Even beyond sustainable business model
       | issues, there are so many configurations, platform features,
       | constraints, user incentives etc. There are two general
       | principles I can think of:
       | 
       | * Let a thousand flowers bloom (in a fediverse context) and let
       | evolutionary trial-and-error determine what works
       | 
       | * Source some insights from the surveillance capitalists as they
       | are the ones who have accumulated the largest empirical factbase
       | about what we should _definitely_ avoid 8-)
        
       | vezycash wrote:
       | Monetization strategy: $10 for 100 more posts.
        
         | guerrilla wrote:
         | That'll shut the poors up.
        
       | Vaslo wrote:
       | Reddit needs this but for upvotes. Tons of low quality posts
       | starting with a barely funny joke that goes 15 replies deep with
       | almost the same joke but less and less funny. If you only have
       | say 5 upvotes a day, you won't contribute garbage to a barely
       | useful thread.
        
         | ok123456 wrote:
         | This is how slashdot does moderation.
        
       | zorr wrote:
       | An interesting concept. Are there limits to just creating a new
       | account when the 100 posts are used?
       | 
       | It could be interesting to have an account with a maximum number
       | of posts, use the last post to announce your next account and
       | thus periodically it forces each of your followers to make a
       | conscious decision on whether or not to remain following you.
        
       | Jaxkr wrote:
       | Hugged to death :(
        
       | lord_and_xavier wrote:
       | Yeah wordpress doesnt scale. hug of death
        
         | wizzwizz4 wrote:
         | I don't like Wordpress either, but correctly configured it's
         | not _that_ much worse than a static site.
        
           | bastawhiz wrote:
           | But the sites that are slow or performance sensitive often
           | aren't just static sites. If it's more than just a simple CMS
           | to you, you need to be enough of a WordPress expert that you
           | probably don't need WordPress in the first place (or you're
           | just using it for the themes or plugins). Weird WP
           | performance cliffs are hard to avoid for dynamic content and
           | "correctly configuring" either means rolling a custom
           | solution or getting neck deep in your infra--both of which
           | smell a lot more like engineering than not.
        
           | Tomte wrote:
           | Correctly configured it is a static site with a minimal stub
           | in PHP.
           | 
           | And if you want to go further you can bypass that stub and
           | serve the static pages directly from your web server.
           | 
           | Best of both worlds, really.
        
             | vmoore wrote:
             | > Correctly configured it is a static site with a minimal
             | stub in PHP
             | 
             | Maybe there's a 1001 plugins being used which means the
             | Wordpress site has to make boatloads of requests to the
             | backend. Many Wordpress sites make that mistake. I keep my
             | plugin count to at _least_ five plugins. And they 're
             | obviously plugins which I _really_ need, and they 're not
             | chatty in any way.
        
           | toast0 wrote:
           | I've only run one wordpress site (and reluctantly), but I
           | found it very hard to configure correctly. I was very happy
           | when I was able to convince my boss to replace it with a much
           | simpler blog system that only supported exactly what we
           | needed.
        
         | noahtallen wrote:
         | A raw HTML file won't scale if it's served from a potato. ;)
         | This probably has more to do with the host & servers than
         | WordPress.
        
           | phil294 wrote:
           | The energy derived from a potato should probably be enough to
           | serve a static webpage with 100 req/s. Even the highest-
           | ranking HN posts should not result in more than five requests
           | per second. It's beyond me how the "HN hug of death" has ever
           | come to be an issue in _any_ scenario.
        
         | zuppy wrote:
         | you couldn't be more wrong. wordpress is one of the easiest
         | apps to scale, put a varnish in front of it as you mostly have
         | static content. you can go even further, move the comments to
         | an external tool and you can have a very long cache.
        
           | lucideer wrote:
           | All your comment has communicated is that Varnish can scale.
           | Wordpress is not Varnish.
           | 
           | The gp isn't "wrong": putting Varnish in front of WP is a
           | possible solution to the fact WP doesn't scale, not a
           | disproof of the fact.
           | 
           | Furthermore it's a highly limited solution: WP is only static
           | if you limit it's use to its static features, and configuring
           | Varnish for the unholy mess of 3rd-party
           | dynamic/interactive/form-handling WP plugins is nightmare
           | territory.
           | 
           | Wordpress doesn't scale.
        
             | kortilla wrote:
             | Producing cache friendly output is how you scale easily.
             | 
             | A content management system that doesn't produce cacheable
             | html isn't scalable and one that does is. It's not the job
             | of the content management system to serve the cached pages.
             | That's what CDNs, browsers, and caching layers in general
             | are for.
        
               | lucideer wrote:
               | Caching is one facet of scaling (albeit a large one).
               | It's not necessarily the job of a CMS to serve cached
               | pages but there's a bunch of other considerations in
               | scaling, particular where database writes are concerned;
               | something that will be relevant in a system where users
               | post content.
               | 
               | Also, see the final paragraph of the comment above for
               | discussion of the extent to which WP "produces cachable
               | html"
        
           | jsuqo wrote:
           | "Jira scales. You just need to put a varnish in front and
           | move the comments to disqus"
        
             | zuppy wrote:
             | no, it doesn't. the content from jira is very dynamic and
             | adding a reverse proxy will not help as much as it will
             | help with a cms.
        
       | rpastuszak wrote:
       | That's such a lovely idea. Reminds me of a game made by one of my
       | friends: https://apps.apple.com/us/app/1-chance/id1529736678
       | 
       | The game itself seems pretty trivial. What makes it really
       | interesting is that you get only one chance to play it.
        
       | silisili wrote:
       | It's neat but seems ephemeral. Maybe that's the point.
       | 
       | I had a not similar but related idea, basically borne from my
       | hatred of Twitter. Basically, you'd only be able to make a
       | comment if you have a credit. Credits would be time based,
       | probably 1 or 2 a day. The only other way to get credits is if
       | the person you replied to likes your comment. Basically, the idea
       | being to quit getting people being so controversial and
       | argumentative.
       | 
       | Edit:
       | 
       | I kept replying below describing some vision that doesn't exist,
       | which I feel is rude to the OP and Minus, so I'll not reply
       | further. As I have little intention in building anything at the
       | moment, feel free to take anything you like from it, Minus et al.
        
         | rzzzt wrote:
         | Token bucket! But perhaps a microtransaction system would also
         | fit neatly in your scenario. >:)
        
           | silisili wrote:
           | I thought about that, but still unsure. Want to be an asshat?
           | Pay a dollar and get another credit.
        
             | axelroze wrote:
             | That won't stop organizations with lots of money unless the
             | cost for more credits raises exponentially. Everyone will
             | have to stop when millions and billions get into play.
        
         | noyesno wrote:
         | Have a look at hubski.com, it uses a similar method.
        
         | maximp wrote:
         | I like that time-based mechanism much better. The
         | karma/engagement-based stuff would just let popular people post
         | more :)
        
           | abeppu wrote:
           | I think this is still bad, because it heavily encourages
           | people to post stuff that others will respond to, which isn't
           | necessarily what's honest, authentic, valuable, etc.
        
             | silisili wrote:
             | Posts, as they are not a response to anything, in my head
             | wouldn't use a credit unless the post tags someone.
             | 
             | So if you want to write mean things, do so in your own
             | posts without bothering others' discussions.
        
           | silisili wrote:
           | Well, not more. Sending a comment takes you down to zero,
           | you're done. Unless that person likes your comment. Popular
           | posts or number of likes per comment would be irrelevant. The
           | idea I guess is to allow and even encourage a friendly back
           | and forth without burning all your credits.
           | 
           | Example. A -I released this tool!
           | 
           | B - Wow nice how long did that take
           | 
           | A - Thanks, 6 months.
           | 
           | At this point, the conversation is done unless both like each
           | other's comment, which in such an exchange would be
           | encouraged.
           | 
           | If C comes along and says 'this tool sucks', even if 50
           | people like it, if A doesn't, C is done commenting for the
           | day.
           | 
           | In fairness, I haven't really thought the whole thing out in
           | detail, just some rough ideas. I appreciate pointing out
           | challenges and dislikes with it though.
        
             | kyle-rb wrote:
             | What if B, for whatever reason, doesn't like A's reply? So
             | A is out of comments for the day, and can't respond to
             | anyone else who replies to them.
             | 
             | B might have just logged off, or maybe their question was
             | bait to intentionally silence A. Either way, A is probably
             | annoyed with B.
        
             | kortilla wrote:
             | Unfortunately this doesn't help with flame wars where
             | people can go over to a sub thread they get agreement on to
             | harvest credits to then brigade the ones they disagree
             | with.
        
               | silisili wrote:
               | This doesn't work in the described way. Commenting takes
               | you to zero, only one person could agree to take you back
               | to 1.
               | 
               | So going to a subgroup of your likeminded people would do
               | nothing. You can comment 'like me pls', which would take
               | you from one credit to 0. The responder liking it would
               | take credit back to 1, which is where it was initially.
               | So, nothing gained.
               | 
               | However, one would have to solve the multiple account
               | problem, which every site has to deal with.
        
             | Saptarishi wrote:
             | Very interesting idea. C can still come back and comment
             | the next day/after a fixed time frame. I think it provides
             | a much needed balance between lack of interaction and over
             | interaction. I guess it can prevent bickering and
             | unnecessary arguments.
             | 
             | Though if anyone wanted to set up an information farm, by
             | creating a bunch of accounts, where they post and like each
             | other, acting like different individuals, it could still
             | create engagement with other innocent people who could
             | eventually become biased, hateful and misinformed.
        
       | whitepaint wrote:
       | Why?
        
         | awb wrote:
         | Constraints can boost creativity
        
       | neilv wrote:
       | https://web.archive.org/web/20210905040333/https://minus.soc...
        
       | aerosmile wrote:
       | 10 years ago, I launched a small modification to a social network
       | I was running at the time - you could only post once per day. The
       | quality of the content went through the roof, but it turned the
       | product into more something like Medium. It had some upsides, but
       | also some downsides. It was amazing to see how such a simple
       | change can dramatically alter the nature of the product.
        
         | dylan604 wrote:
         | This to me is the equivalent to the war on drugs. If you limit
         | someone's ability on your platform, they will find a different
         | platform. Until you squash the need/desire, those with the
         | need/desire will find a solution.
         | 
         | Addiction is more complicated.
        
       | andrewclunn wrote:
       | With no text limit and infinite edits, this could be useful.
        
       | maximp wrote:
       | This product seems to combine a few unrelated ideas. No
       | monetization, reverse-chronological feed, no notifications:
       | sweet. Easier to have cleaner, more meaningful conversations with
       | people, hopefully. In short, a nicer, ad-free, less-harmful
       | Facebook. How will you pay for it if it ever gets popular?
       | 
       | I'm not sure how limited posts play into this. I think the
       | intention is to make users really think about what they're
       | posting. But the arbitrary, "nice, round number" limit just feels
       | existentially dreadful at best, and like a headline-generating
       | schtick at worst. Surely there's some other mechanism that can
       | nudge people towards more thoughtful, less self-promoting posts
       | (or whatever the goal is); maybe limiting posts to one a day?
        
         | bodge5000 wrote:
         | I think the question of "how will you pay for this if it gets
         | popular" is so important for how often it gets ignored.
         | 
         | I know I've had many hobby projects I've just fallen short on
         | because of fears of how I'd pay for it. Of course these might
         | just be for the fun of making it, but the problem then is that,
         | at least for me, I'd dread what should be a moment of
         | celebration, it getting popular. It could easily put you in
         | massive debt.
         | 
         | Of course a lot of people seem to be of the "I'll cross that
         | bridge if I come to it" type but me, I just couldnt work like
         | that. So congrats to those people I suppose
        
           | franga2000 wrote:
           | The way I've always prepared for that was to run things on
           | fixed-cost hosting and if it crashes, it crashes. No way I
           | could get a 10kEUR AWS bill overnight if my project blew up
           | on HN because they all run on one dedicated machine that
           | costs me almost exactly 1 espresso per day.
           | 
           | If people end up liking something enough to need more
           | capacity, I can scale the server manually to however much I'm
           | willing to spend and immediately set up
           | Patreon/Kofi/whatever. If people contribute enough to pay for
           | a bigger server, I do that. If they don't, it's their problem
           | that it's slow or keeps crashing. My IPs are always
           | prioritised by the load balancer, so it makes little
           | difference to me.
        
             | bodge5000 wrote:
             | I had a similar idea a few months ago, basically have a
             | patreon/whatever monthly goal, if it doesn't get hit
             | (enough to pay for the server costs), it doesnt get paid
             | for and goes down. You could even have a "stretch goal" for
             | dev time (basically what would be your profits), if it
             | earns enough you spend time fixing bugs and adding
             | features, if it just gets enough to keep it running, it
             | just keeps running.
             | 
             | It seems like a nice and safe idea, but it does somewhat
             | limit profitability I suppose, but thats an entirely
             | different matter
        
         | georgeoliver wrote:
         | This particular implementation isn't a product (it's an art
         | piece).
        
         | sundarurfriend wrote:
         | > But the arbitrary, "nice, round number" limit just feels
         | existentially dreadful at best, and like a headline-generating
         | schtick at worst.
         | 
         | From TFA:
         | 
         | > Minus was created by Ben Grosser and commissioned by arebyte
         | Gallery (London, UK) as part of the solo exhibition Software
         | for Less [https://www.arebyte.com/software-for-less].
         | 
         | It's an art project. Headline-generating schticks and
         | existential dread are to be expected.
        
         | zhte415 wrote:
         | I went to https://www.arebyte.com/ and right-clicked the
         | Twitter feed icon. Right click for this had been disabled.
         | 
         | So then I looked at the source, and saw it was done on
         | Sharespace. So, not sure how much dog food is being eaten in
         | 
         | > Each work is presented as a product that could have come out
         | of an alternative Silicon Valley, interrogating and reimagining
         | how software is created, operated, and sold.
         | 
         | And,
         | 
         | > Utilising custom methods such as software recomposition,
         | techniques such as data obfuscation
         | 
         | But use Google Analytics.
         | 
         | And then, from the speech...
         | 
         | > The last twenty years have been characterized by the rise of
         | software.
         | 
         | Twenty years ago was recovery period from the .com boom. It's
         | been a little more than 20 years. If anything I'd call the past
         | 10 years dull, where walled social networks have sought to
         | raise their walls ever higher, that might be interesting.
        
         | Stupulous wrote:
         | Re: one a day
         | 
         | By coincidence, earlier today I had the same idea. I was
         | thinking about how so much of what you encounter in social
         | media is biased towards people who post a lot.
         | 
         | In politics, for example, most people are relatively moderate.
         | People who spend more time talking about politics are more
         | likely to hold extreme positions. And people who spend the most
         | time talking about politics are the ones who spend the least
         | time evaluating their and others' positions. So the political
         | social media is dominated by uneducated extremists with hot
         | takes. (I admit this often includes myself, though I do try to
         | put effort into my comments).
         | 
         | A possible solution to this would be reducing the amount of
         | allowed posts per time, which would quiet the noise and give
         | high-effort interactions a more level playing field. Of course,
         | that sucks for engagement and interferes with topics like humor
         | that benefit from low-effort contributions. I wonder if there's
         | a client-side way to bias your feed towards people who post
         | less frequently.
        
           | darig wrote:
           | Any only system that attempts to limit the bandwidth of
           | single accounts will be overrun by forged and stolen accounts
           | to make up for the restrictions. At the same time, honest
           | account holders are silenced, unable to counter. The system
           | is doomed to fail.
        
           | pbronez wrote:
           | I agree. Honestly, one a week would be great.
        
         | lcnmrn wrote:
         | I scaled Subreply with the same amount of money I would pay for
         | Netflix/Spotify.
        
       | JasonFruit wrote:
       | I know, I know, this is more art than a serious social medium (if
       | social media can be serious): but I don't think the concept is as
       | clever as it tries to seem. A project like this, even as an
       | _objet d 'art_, ought to inspire someone to interact with it, to
       | poke at it and see what happens -- but would anyone really
       | bother? The limitations would make you think carefully about what
       | you share with the community, but that caution works against
       | building any sort of community, even an ephemeral one. It's just
       | not attractive or engaging, like a painting you'd see in a
       | gallery and walk past after a glance.
        
       | SkyMarshal wrote:
       | Is there no way to view the timeline without creating an account?
        
         | aero-glide2 wrote:
         | Use temp-mail.org
        
           | SkyMarshal wrote:
           | It's not a privacy issue for me, more a labor issue. I don't
           | want to make the effort to create an account (and verify my
           | email address) without at least checking out the activity on
           | the site.
        
             | gvv wrote:
             | writing this post probably took more time than doing that
             | to be fair :)
        
               | SkyMarshal wrote:
               | Haha, probably. I guess I'm selectively lazy then. :)
        
       | johnnyApplePRNG wrote:
       | Interesting idea, but what's stopping someone from creating a
       | second account?
        
         | nacs wrote:
         | Nothing and that's exactly what would happen if it became
         | popular.
         | 
         | You'd get @kanyewest7, @kanyewest289, @kanyewest3058, etc.
         | 
         | Also, the younger you are when you join the network, the fewer
         | posts you get per year. If you join as an 18 year old, you have
         | a little over 1 post per year remaining. If you join at 90, you
         | have 10 posts per year, etc.
        
           | awb wrote:
           | Presumably they could ban duplicate accounts.
           | 
           | But yeah 100 posts per year or 1 per day would be interesting
           | too and wouldn't render your account as useless when you max
           | out temporarily instead of permanently.
        
           | gharman wrote:
           | That's a feature! That 90yo probably has rather more worth
           | sharing than the 18yo.
        
         | axelroze wrote:
         | Inconvenience. With the second account one has to re-friend all
         | the users from the first account. Also it would lead to bad
         | social standing as by re-friending it will be obvious they are
         | breaking the 100 posts per person per life rule. This could
         | even lead to automatic bans by studying the connection
         | structure.
        
         | pgroves wrote:
         | That's what I want... this would force me to make a different
         | account for every topic I might comment/post on, and they can
         | have their own local networks. If it's a topic that I know a
         | lot about (eg what I do at my day job), it would force a fresh
         | start every few years.
         | 
         | This is in contrast to my twitter account, which is such a mess
         | that I don't like posting b/c "most" people who will see it
         | followed me for some other topic.
        
       | b7bfcdeaab33 wrote:
       | Why does it require my email, first name, last name, and username
       | to start?
        
       | JosephK wrote:
       | Notable that you can edit comments after posting, which makes the
       | number of posts you can make virtually limitless.
        
       | nicktorba wrote:
       | my biggest problem with this idea is that many people are already
       | hesitant to write/post online. limiting the number of posts they
       | are allowed to make might make their post anxiety even worse.
       | 
       | i do like the sentiment behind it though
        
       | jonnycomputer wrote:
       | I'd rather it be: you post it, and others will see it in 100
       | days.
        
       | yellow_lead wrote:
       | The artist has many more gimmick projects like this if anyone
       | else is interested
       | 
       | https://bengrosser.com/projects/
        
       | abeppu wrote:
       | I love this as an idea, but I suspect as a user, I would use
       | either zero or one posts.
       | 
       | I do like the idea that the platform can actively disrupt the
       | "addictive" patterns that develop elsewhere. Other things I've
       | wanted:
       | 
       | - Instagram with an ML layer that auto-rejects pics with faces or
       | text. Landscapes, vistas, animals, architecture etc all would be
       | welcome.
       | 
       | - high latency Twitter, where no post is viewable until at least
       | 2 weeks after it's published. Bickering threads become
       | impractical. People learn to post stuff that will be worth caring
       | about later.
       | 
       | - Clearly just for entertainment and not information Facebook
       | alternative, in which GPT bots produce a significant fraction of
       | posts, impersonating users and making stuff up. Everyone quickly
       | learns you can't trust it, but it can still be cute/fun/humorous.
        
         | fogof wrote:
         | Let me take this chance to mention the "Unhook" Youtube browser
         | extension, which I recently added and which I think has been
         | having a big positive effect for me. The extension allows you
         | to remove (among other things, it's very customizable) the
         | sidebar of suggested videos from Youtube.
         | 
         | This extension has been more effective for me than any other at
         | cutting down how much youtube I watch. Maybe the biggest factor
         | in this is that it doesn't ban me from youtube entirely - When
         | I've tried extensions like that in the past, I've always ended
         | up uninstalling the extension when I needed to watch a youtube
         | video for work. This way, I can watch a little, but the lack of
         | constant new recommendations keeps me from spending hours and
         | hours on the site.
        
           | lolinder wrote:
           | Seconded, but just a note that if you're using ublock origin
           | you can just block the sidebar with a content filter.
           | 
           | I've blocked the sidebar and the comments section. The former
           | has dramatically reduced the amount of time I spend on
           | YouTube. The latter has dramatically reduced my exposure to
           | the inanity of the YouTube comments section. Both are huge
           | quality of life improvements.
        
         | simias wrote:
         | I really like like the idea of a "high latency" social network,
         | effectively bringing back the feeling of old snail mail (but
         | more public).
         | 
         | 2 weeks seems unnecessarily extreme to me though, even 24h
         | would probably be enough to severely limit the flame potential.
         | It would also potentially mean that one could have a daily
         | routine of checking for the new content and replies and writing
         | your own stuff and you're good to go for the day.
         | 
         | Although to really be effective I think it'd have to work on a
         | global tick (i.e., all new content is published once a day at a
         | certain time). Otherwise the new content would still slowly
         | drip continuously and you'd still have the addictive nature of
         | social networks.
         | 
         | At this point I'm sort of reinventing a collaborative version
         | of a newspaper.
        
           | abeppu wrote:
           | I picked 2 weeks because I wanted to discourage talking about
           | the news. Or responding/reacting to something dumb a public
           | figure did or said.
        
             | hvusslax wrote:
             | Even just 24 hours would do a lot to disrupt the echo
             | chamber.
        
             | WorldMaker wrote:
             | 2 weeks would match up with certain snail mail geography
             | especially around the horse/carriage era.
             | 
             | It might be fun/interesting to try to base the latency upon
             | simulated geography: whether the entirely fictional
             | geometry of something like classic GeoCities where you get
             | assigned a random address in a digital "neighborhood"
             | somewhere when you sign up, or use real world geography and
             | filter it through ancient routing restrictions like "how
             | long would it take in the post by horse/carriage".
             | 
             | A benefit to a dynamic latency such as simulated geography
             | would be that it would make it even tougher to sync
             | together how posts would be arriving from multiple users
             | (unless you were targeting a specific user).
        
           | nicktorba wrote:
           | I'd love a high latency app as well, but there is undeniable
           | magic in instant communication. My best writing is often when
           | I'm "hot" on a topic and can quickly go back and forth with
           | others on the idea. Steam could quickly run out for that type
           | of thing without instant communication.
        
             | smichel17 wrote:
             | Continuing to brainstorm--
             | 
             | Say, the way some messaging platforms have threads which
             | can branch off of the main channel. Maybe this platform has
             | something like that, too; instantaneous _and temporary_ ,
             | where messages disappear N minutes after they're sent. So
             | you can post publicly on the time-delayed cadence, or chat
             | semi-privately in realtime.
             | 
             | I'm not sure if that undermines the desirable properties of
             | the time delay.
        
               | RiceMunk wrote:
               | I wonder how much sense it would make for there to be
               | some (simple) function you can tweak a number on to set a
               | balance between the latency and lifetime of your message?
               | 
               | For example the lifetime of your message (counting from
               | when it shows up) could be 2 times the latency of it,
               | e.g. a message with a latency of 1 day would exist for 2
               | days.
        
           | britch wrote:
           | I like the "collaborative-newspaper" idea a lot.
           | 
           | Though I haven't used it much, this sounds like substack +
           | RSS, that only refreshes once a day.
           | 
           | It's missing some interactivity I suppose
        
             | ddalex wrote:
             | Thus usenet was reinvented
        
             | krisroadruck wrote:
             | I bought newsto.me like a decade ago with a plan to build a
             | collaborative news site complete with gamification to
             | really help the collaborative bit (eg one user writes a bit
             | about a house fire happening, a photog in the area could
             | earn points for snapping a photo and adding it to the
             | story)
             | 
             | Never found sufficient time/motivation to execute on it.
             | Still think it would be kinda cool though.
        
           | Infernal wrote:
           | I've considered something similar, call it The Morning Post
           | or some such. Choose your delivery/send time, and all your
           | content gets posted (and all previously posted content gets
           | revealed to you). Put some sane limit on the number of times
           | you can change your post/delivery time (once a day?).
        
           | adventured wrote:
           | It's not necessary to inject intentional latency in the
           | manner the parent suggests via a rather extreme delay.
           | 
           | You can accomplish a lot of the same outcome by merely
           | eradicating following feeds (that is, the combined stream of
           | posts from users that you follow).
           | 
           | In the early days of Facebook when you had to manually visit
           | user pages to see what was new with someone or what they were
           | posting, it was dramatically lower velocity in terms of how
           | fast bullshit would spread and how much content you could
           | reasonably consume. It would reduce page views / content
           | views spectacularly, by including just that little bit of
           | time and labor cost to the consumption. People would focus
           | that effort primarily on the users that really matter to
           | them.
           | 
           | The social networks of course know this. They built the
           | streams / feeds / walls for that reason, to turbocharge the
           | addiction. They'll never give it up.
        
             | jest wrote:
             | Yet, the possible resistance is also on the consuming side.
             | It requires _a lot_ of willpower not to flow with the
             | river, but tools like Fraidycat (https://fraidyc.at/) help
             | a bit in following people not trends.
        
             | chockablock wrote:
             | I currently use Twitter this way. I stay logged out
             | (deleted the password from my password manager) and visit
             | Twitter.com/username directly for a few folks I want to
             | read. It's indeed way less addicting.
             | 
             | (Twitter really wants you to log in and view your feed but
             | they'll still let you read the site this way)
        
           | mhh__ wrote:
           | Is this not email?
           | 
           | I really hope to be able to report back in about a year or so
           | on ways to better communicate. At first I thought, maybe the
           | best online dialectics is just walls of careful text rather
           | than tweets. Now I try doing that, and I make careless
           | mistakes and I can barely parse a paragraph without losing my
           | train of thought.
           | 
           | The solution I think is explicit structure. Arguments usually
           | form a (for now let's say) DAG, let's present them that way
           | explicitly. Metadata, i.e. human emotion can be annotated
           | onto that - emoji, good or bad vibes? If you can diff that
           | graph even better.
           | 
           | Argument Maps are kind of a non-technological approach to
           | this: https://fbistudies.com/wp-
           | content/uploads/2015/04/20150417_R... really impressed me.
           | 
           | In fact, working in a fully-remote, fairly high information
           | density (finance) company, I think the work of the pioneer
           | cyberneticists (and potentially Soviet ones, not sure on that
           | as I can't speak Russian) could be immensely helpful for
           | modelling and manipulating the spread of information and
           | humanity within a company.
        
             | montroser wrote:
             | No, it's not email.
             | 
             | Email has a latency measured in seconds. Also, email is not
             | usually public.
             | 
             | Explicit structure could be interesting, but structure from
             | whose perspective? Arguments can be modeled many ways, such
             | that there is no one correct answer. Also, that the
             | argument could be modeled as a DAG might be very optimistic
             | in many circumstances.
        
         | franga2000 wrote:
         | +1 for the high latency idea. I recently witnessed a really bad
         | screaming match on an NGO mailing list between a bunch of anti-
         | vaxxers and, for lack of a better term, the reasonable people.
         | Emails were flying at a rate of 1 every few minutes for long
         | into the nights. What ended up solving it was appointing a
         | moderator that has to approve all the posts beffore they go
         | out. They don't actually block any, they just have to press the
         | approve button. This meant that it usually takes anywhere from
         | half a day to 2 days for a post to go through, so people
         | started thinking a lot more about what they posted and what
         | they read. It became not only slower, but a more civilised and
         | though-out discussion.
        
         | villasv wrote:
         | > high latency Twitter
         | 
         | This seems easy enough for current twitter-fediverse-clones to
         | implement.
        
         | _tom_ wrote:
         | So, Facebook? :-)
        
         | [deleted]
        
         | exporectomy wrote:
         | The trouble with making a worse option is that people still
         | have choice and will simply use the more entertaining version
         | instead. You can't just make a new social network that's not as
         | engaging as the existing ones because nobody would use it. The
         | moment you're really curious about the thing being hidden from
         | you in the degraded service, you'll sneak a look at the real
         | one to find out. If you had so much self control that you
         | don't, then why do you even need a service for it? Just limit
         | the number of hours you spend on social media yourself.
        
           | PebblesRox wrote:
           | In this case the community would be a self-selecting group of
           | people with self control and a value for more thoughtful
           | communication. The resulting content would presumably be
           | different from what you'd get if you just viewed mainstream
           | social media on a restricted schedule.
        
         | Beaver117 wrote:
         | For the last one: https://www.reddit.com/r/SubSimulatorGPT2/
        
         | dunnevens wrote:
         | Regarding high latency twitter: maybe someone should make
         | FidoNet.social. For those who don't remember, back in the early
         | 90's your local BBS's might offer message boards connected to
         | the rest of the US/world. Not a continuous connection. Every
         | day at 2 AM (or whenever), your favorite BBS would dial into
         | some remote node and sync messages.
         | 
         | Practical effect was a roughly 24-48 (or more) hour wait for
         | responses. Didn't stop bickering though. I was quite young at
         | the time. Asked some question about a game. The first response
         | was fairly hostile. Which started an argument. My first time
         | flamed online, and my first online argument. Which went very
         | slowly.
         | 
         | Still, slow social media would be interesting. I kinda like the
         | FidoNet model. Where syncing only happens once a day. Maybe
         | only at a set time overnight. Faster than snailmail but you
         | have the full day to type out your response about why Ultima V
         | did not suck as your opponent claimed. With the ability to
         | submit a post any time, but also with the ability to edit it
         | until sync. I think it would encourage long posting more than
         | the current systems. Which may or may not be a good thing.
        
           | hkt wrote:
           | I've always wondered about the practicality of doing
           | something like fidonet over AX25/some other packet radio
           | system. It'd be fabulous to be able to ditch the internet and
           | participate in something slower and more humane. Your post
           | has reminded me of that ambition. These days, I'd love an
           | e-ink display to accompany it. Slow computing!
        
             | int_19h wrote:
             | With AREDN, you get a whole TCP/IP ecosystem to play with.
             | This could then be used to run protocols like UUCP or NNTP,
             | that are tailored to disconnected scenarios.
             | 
             | https://arednmesh.readthedocs.io/
        
           | int_19h wrote:
           | FidoNet didn't really mandate syncing once per day. It
           | required the nodes to sync _at least_ that often, and
           | established a common hour for each zone to allow direct node-
           | to-node connections for that purpose; but even in late 90s,
           | larger nodes would already sync more often in practice.
           | 
           | FWIW FidoNet is still around, although most connections seem
           | to be over IP these days.
        
         | kripy wrote:
         | > Clearly just for entertainment and not information Facebook
         | alternative, in which GPT bots produce a significant fraction
         | of posts, impersonating users and making stuff up. Everyone
         | quickly learns you can't trust it, but it can still be
         | cute/fun/humorous.
         | 
         | Billy Chasen developed faux-social network called Botnet.
         | Unfortunately, it looks like it's gone and I doubt that name
         | would have lasted long in the App store let alone how he
         | managed to get it through.
         | 
         | https://www.wired.com/story/botnet-social-network-where-ever...
        
         | 0-_-0 wrote:
         | The latency idea actually makes a lot of sense
        
           | woko wrote:
           | I emulate it by deactivating as many notifications as
           | possible, and manually checking replies after a few days or
           | weeks, when I remember. I have noticed that what was a "hot"
           | discussion often becomes pointless and laughable after enough
           | time has elapsed. I usually don't feel the need to reply to
           | these old bickerings anymore.
        
         | Y_Y wrote:
         | What about a low-bandwidth Twitter, where posts load
         | immediately, but at 2e-3 bits per second, so that it takes two
         | weeks to load the whole thing.
        
           | itisit wrote:
           | Call it "Loris"
        
           | rzzzt wrote:
           | The combination of your ideas would be Mars rover Twitter:
           | 5-20 minutes propagation delay, 160-800 bps bandwidth using
           | the X-Band High-Gain Antenna - https://mars.nasa.gov/mars2020
           | /spacecraft/rover/communicatio...
        
         | dylan604 wrote:
         | >- Clearly just for entertainment and not information Facebook
         | alternative, in which GPT bots produce a significant fraction
         | of posts, impersonating users and making stuff up. Everyone
         | quickly learns you can't trust it, but it can still be
         | cute/fun/humorous.
         | 
         | Aren't we pretty much there now with a so many bots posting?
        
           | abeppu wrote:
           | I think a bunch of people still credulously believe most of
           | what they read. But if some days the bot actively
           | impersonated _you_, and people reacted to stuff it said on
           | your behalf, I think you'd have to grok pretty quickly that a
           | lot of content is fake. So let's do that for every user,
           | unpredictably, a reasonable percentage of the time.
        
             | dylan604 wrote:
             | scorched earth, why not? I think this is just about right
             | though. Humans were not ready for social media, so burn it
             | to the ground. however, if what the bot says on my behalf
             | brings disrupte to my name, no repurcursions should be
             | bestowed on me.
        
         | billpg wrote:
         | Usenet used to be like this for me. With high cost dialup, I'd
         | download batches of posts, read them and respond offline,
         | uploading my responses at the same time I download the
         | following day's batch.
        
         | aymendjellal wrote:
         | For the twitter latency
         | 
         | Have you tried slowly.app? It's an app that simulates snail
         | mail Pairs you with someone based on your preferences and you
         | can write them a letter / email that will be delivered in a few
         | hours / days, based on your distance with said person
        
           | akamaozu wrote:
           | Was really into slowly.app for a while, and pleasantly
           | surprised to see it suggested here.
           | 
           | I would recommend it to anyone looking to experiment with a
           | "high latency social network".
        
       | [deleted]
        
       | Andrew_nenakhov wrote:
       | How about the last post being a redirect to new account?
        
       | anderspitman wrote:
       | This but limited to 100 friends.
        
       | Amorymeltzer wrote:
       | There was a social network "this" some years back, the idea being
       | that you could make just one post a day. I enjoyed it a bit, and
       | IIRC it didn't do too terribly.
       | 
       | Predictably, it's now gone.
        
         | sayhar wrote:
         | I have one of their stickers. It was nice! IIRC it was doing
         | fine, but they ran of out funding and their next round of
         | financing fell through unexpectedly.
        
       | quickthrower2 wrote:
       | The old "X" but with new cool restriction "Y" startup idea. Like
       | Twitter or Snapchat.
        
       | beckman466 wrote:
       | Sounds a bit like the dev got stuck in the childhood fear/fantasy
       | of "what if the more words I speak, the sooner I die"...
        
       | [deleted]
        
       | droptablemain wrote:
       | I don't use social media, so I'm probably not the target audience
       | anyway -- but I don't understand this at all. It just seems like
       | an arbitrary and stupid limitation.
        
         | juliend2 wrote:
         | Limitation breeds creativity.
        
       | rekoros wrote:
       | This comes from the same galaxy as
       | https://www.yourworldoftext.com/
        
       | 01100011 wrote:
       | I wonder what sorts of social media we'd see if it wasn't
       | dependent on selling ads. The need to drive engagement and sell
       | things to people tends to limit the types of social media. It's
       | nice to see an experiment like this but I don't know if it will
       | go anywhere.
       | 
       | I was thinking the other day of an idea where you take turns with
       | people in your circle to become a 'star' for a period of
       | time(day, days, week, hour, whatever) every so often. During that
       | time you get the limelight, and become the focus of the group.
       | Imagine that, during that tie period, you're encouraged to share
       | more of the boring details of life. Like 5 minutes of every hour
       | or two maybe.
       | 
       | Something like this appeals to me because I feel like I don't
       | really connect with my friends on social media the way I would in
       | real life. If I hung out with a friend, I'd experience more of
       | the banalities and have a more complete picture of what their day
       | to day life was actually like. Obviously that's not something you
       | want to get blasted with every day in your feed, and it's not
       | something you want the responsibility to produce every day, but
       | let's say it happens once a year for each person.
       | 
       | I just feel like the Facebook/Instagram model promotes a focus on
       | curated highlights of a persons life, which is fine, but doesn't
       | really feel like friendship. I want something that replaces the
       | experience of spending a day with someone. With all the distance
       | between us these days, either from economic migration, the
       | pandemic, or whatever, I really feel like I'm losing touch with
       | my friends. Seeing their highlights on my feed or even
       | communicating with them via text/im/voice just doesn't cut it.
       | How can we provide that sense of connection remotely?
        
         | myself248 wrote:
         | > take turns with people in your circle to become a 'star' for
         | a period of time
         | 
         | I like this idea. For a while, "day in the life of a ____"
         | posts were very popular on imgur, and I really enjoyed it, even
         | though they were strangers.
         | 
         | The downside I figure might be that after someone's star-time,
         | they get a lot of incoming attention, which then fades out.
         | Some people might react quite well to that and others quite
         | poorly, so I figure you'd need a set of other functions (say,
         | blast-from-the-past auto-regurgiations, or week-delayed emails
         | as suggested in another post here) to mitigate that and help
         | people of various social proclivities all feel comfortable.
         | 
         | I miss letter writing. When you'd sit down and put real thought
         | into it because you'd know it would be the only time you'd
         | communicate for the next week or two. Or even tape swapping --
         | my dad and uncle used to mail tapes back and forth, hour-long
         | audio rambles because it was more fun than the written word.
         | Every tape started with a delay to make sure the leader was
         | past the head, then the "pk-ssht" of a beer can being
         | opened....
        
         | OneEyedRobot wrote:
         | >I wonder what sorts of social media we'd see if it wasn't
         | dependent on selling ads.
         | 
         | I suppose you could skim through Usenet archives.
        
         | martinrue wrote:
         | > I wonder what sorts of social media we'd see if it wasn't
         | dependent on selling ads.
         | 
         | This is why I got interested in Gemini. It's a modern take on
         | Gopher and the network already has a lot of folks posting
         | content and sharing ideas completely free of the normal
         | commercial goals you see on most http sites. I even made a
         | small Twitter clone, Station, which has about 260 users right
         | now. If you're a Gemini user, come hang out:
         | gemini://station.martinrue.com
        
           | tjpnz wrote:
           | I've found some fantastic content through Gemini but it's
           | difficult finding content when several of the half dozen
           | search engines are down at once or the links themselves are
           | dead. Is this a common issue?
        
         | dnautics wrote:
         | > I wonder what sorts of social media we'd see if it wasn't
         | dependent on selling ads.
         | 
         | Probably there are two best answers to this.
         | 
         | 1) hn. No ads. Social network (in the way that Reddit is).
         | 
         | 2) build it! FB monetizes each person on the order of $10-20
         | per human per year. So just start up a social network that
         | costs $10/year. Pick a few principles you want to stick to and
         | see if it survives.
         | 
         | Edit: I see my estimates are wrong since time has passed; it's
         | now more like $40-50 per human per year, but I think maybe some
         | of the properties are worth more per person (almost certainly
         | instragram is worth more per person than fb proper).
        
         | crazygringo wrote:
         | > _if it wasn 't dependent on selling ads. The need to drive
         | engagement_
         | 
         | Driving engagement isn't a consequence of ads. Netflix tries to
         | aggressively drive engagement too and it doesn't have ads.
         | 
         | The reason is simple: the less people use a service, the more
         | likely they are to unsubscribe. The more likely they are to
         | spend their time on a competing service that's doing a better
         | job at driving engagement.
         | 
         | Driving engagement is necessary for a business period, no
         | matter how they're funded.
        
           | divan wrote:
           | > Driving engagement is necessary for a business period, no
           | matter how they're funded.
           | 
           | Wikipedia is doing fine without driving engagement though.
        
           | leobg wrote:
           | Well, there always has been a substantial difference in the
           | quality of journalism between newspapers (subscription based)
           | and tabloids (sold individually), wasn't there?
           | 
           | What the internet adds, of course, is the constant
           | competitive pressure of other content which will always be
           | flashier, clickbaity, and emotion-triggering than yours. So
           | people will switch faster if you don't compete on these
           | terms.
           | 
           | By contrast, a NYT reader 30 years back never got exposed to
           | much of the competition's content. So there was no reason for
           | switching. You just stuck with the partner you had chosen,
           | simply because there was no "Tinder", so to speak.
        
             | crazygringo wrote:
             | I honestly don't know what you're talking about.
             | 
             | You've always been able to buy newspapers individually and
             | subscribe to tabloids.
             | 
             | And a NYT reader 30 years ago was exposed to the
             | competitions content literally every time they walked into
             | a drugstore or supermarket, with a stack of competing
             | newspapers with competing headlines yelling for attention.
             | 
             | And if you think people stuck with the partner they chose
             | 30 years ago... I've got news for you. ;)
        
             | tshaddox wrote:
             | If old movies are to be believed, you could always buy
             | newspapers individually from little boxes on the sidewalk
             | for from the kiosk of a friendly guy who knows everyone in
             | the neighborhood.
        
           | draugadrotten wrote:
           | >Netflix tries to aggressively drive engagement too and it
           | doesn't have ads.
           | 
           | Do you really believe that or are you not seeing all the
           | product placements as advertisment?
           | 
           |  _proceeds to slowly sip from branded bottle, carefully
           | placing it on the table with the labels towards the camera_
        
         | cyborgx7 wrote:
         | >I wonder what sorts of social media we'd see if it wasn't
         | dependent on selling ads.
         | 
         | I hope we, as a society, can rediscover publicly funded
         | infrastructure. If I was in a position of power in my national
         | government I would push for some amount of cloud storage, a web
         | presence and a public image hosting site (among others, this is
         | just off the top of my head), accessible to all citizens, free
         | of charge.
        
       | superasn wrote:
       | I would prefer if it was like 3 or 5 post a month.
       | 
       | Since that way you're never at the end of your line and it would
       | still avoid a lot of the noise which I think this site hopes to
       | achieve.
        
       | [deleted]
        
       | aero-glide2 wrote:
       | This could work if it had groups based on topics.
        
       | juliend2 wrote:
       | (Site is down)
       | 
       | Here's the intro video: https://vimeo.com/587261149
        
       | zkid18 wrote:
       | Hey, nice idea! Not sure if that an expected behavior or not, but
       | after login I get straight into WP panel.
        
       | [deleted]
        
       | gnull wrote:
       | What's always difficult when trying out projects like this one is
       | that none of my friends are willing to join it with me, so I have
       | to either talk to myself or to strangers. And this weakens the
       | feeling of engagement for me.
        
       | soneca wrote:
       | Tangential plug, I launched my own social network without feed,
       | notifications, or even a way to find people there.
       | 
       | It flopped everywhere I promoted it, but it is still online since
       | I am on free tier of the host service.
       | 
       | If anyone wants to check it:
       | 
       | https://www.quidsentio.com
        
         | smoldesu wrote:
         | > ...It flopped everywhere I promoted it...
         | 
         | Have you considered lowering the barrier-of-entry from $19? For
         | what is effectively a journaling app, you're driving an
         | incredible amount of margin out of a scenario where your
         | audience has no incentive to pay.
        
           | soneca wrote:
           | It is a _shared_ journaling app, not many of those around. I
           | believe $19 annually is pretty low already ($1.58/month). And
           | people have to pay only after they have a lot of posts, so
           | anyone can try for free. If people aren't willing to pay
           | that, it does not make sense to lower the price, but rather
           | give up the idea.
           | 
           | Even my comment above mentioning has been downvoted twice. It
           | is pretty clear it's not something people want.
        
         | LegitShady wrote:
         | I think you built something that was by design a niche product.
         | Big social networks experience network effects - when a bunch
         | of your friends/family/etc are already on a free social network
         | it makes the barrier/effort low.
         | 
         | If you have a social network like you made it requires that
         | groups of people join it together, and that they know the other
         | has it in advance, and that costs money to post beyond a
         | certain number of posts - it's not clear what that they can get
         | from you that they can't get from facebook or instagram already
         | for free. It's not clear what you're offering that's better
         | than those two.
         | 
         | The features of 'no feed, no notifications, no way to find
         | people' isn't necessarily a plus to the overwhelming majority
         | of users, and from your page I don't understand what you offer
         | in your service that even someone who journals wants.
        
           | soneca wrote:
           | I agree
        
       | makach wrote:
       | How about I throw in a shitload of money only request is that you
       | allow me to post regardless of that limit?
       | 
       | Concept seems flawed.
        
       | [deleted]
        
       | broabprobe wrote:
       | In my mind the best social network would limit people to 1 post
       | per week (or month?). Then no one is creating more noise than
       | anyone else, you get to what's really important, and you can
       | actually catch up with everyone.
        
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