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comment by user-inactivated
user-inactivated  ·  4305 days ago  ·  link  ·    ·  parent  ·  post: A reddit admin on tags

There's no mechanism capable of averting tag decay. If there were, it would be in Reddit Enhancement Suite and I would not be posting on hubski.

The truth is, the best way to moderate public tag-based communities so far has been blacklisting, either of users or keywords. Several approaches have been attempted, including personal blacklists, moderator blacklists, and democratic blacklists (up/down voting). Repeatedly, the massive inhuman scale of internet communities has demonstrated that effective blacklisting of individuals from public communities is infeasible.

Hubski's userwhitelist+tagblacklist approach inverted this, and has the potential to scale better than the tagwhitelist+userblacklist approach.

Any desire to follow tags is just conservatism or nostalgia. It is the side-effect of remembering the old comfortable paradigms of reddit and the like.





ecib  ·  4305 days ago  ·  link  ·  

    >Any desire to follow tags is just conservatism or nostalgia. It is the side-effect of remembering the old comfortable paradigms of reddit and the like.

Hmm. You could be right. But do you think there is a third, non-binary way? Could you have innovative use of tags as a secondary path to content? I'm not ready to say you can't, and that it couldn't be a good experience.

user-inactivated  ·  4305 days ago  ·  link  ·  

Perhaps the only aspect of tags I enjoy is their ability to provide an unadulterated firehose of constantly new content. The reddit anarconfederation is a good example of this: it's a massive multireddit sorted by new. Nothing but a straight blast of completely unfiltered content from dozens of subreddits.

http://dbzer0.com/anarconfederation

An unmoderated "new" feed enables the purest form of content discovery, and since there is no ranking, it is not susceptible to the community problems that usually come with the tag mechanism.

This isn't really innovative in any way, it's perhaps the oldest mechanism of content organization, yet it still holds value.

ecib  ·  4303 days ago  ·  link  ·  

    Perhaps the only aspect of tags I enjoy is their ability to provide an unadulterated firehose of constantly new content.

If that value exists at all in the first place (and I think it does), my question is "Can it be captured in an effective manner without the downsides from a cost-benefit point of view?"