• im stuff@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    2 years ago

    honestly we should have collectively realized way earlier that putting all the useful, readable, un-touched-by-SEO help content for basically every niche hobby fandom and ideology in the hands of one for-profit entity was not very wisdom-pilled of us

    • noodlejetski@beehaw.org
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      2 years ago

      we should have collectively realized way earlier

      some people have, but whenever you’d mention it, you’d be met with “lol take the tinfoil hat off”, “but we’re already using [for-profit platform] why would we move when everyone’s here” and “but it’s haaaaaaard”.

    • boonhet@lemm.ee
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      2 years ago

      I’ve said it numerous times over the years, the Internet has been centralizing rapidly and it benefits none of us.

      In 2005 you’d wander around, going from peoples’ personal pages to forums to whatever else people linked. In 2015 half of those websites were dead because everyone got their content on reddit anyway.

    • withersailor@aussie.zone
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      2 years ago

      Yes. When everyone enters info on corporate sites, sooner or later they’ll decide to monetize it.

      Reddit going evil on charges and showing their colours in the AMA has been a wake up.

    • twack@lemmy.world
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      2 years ago

      I agree, but I also have serious concerns about this being the replacement strategy. It could be because of my ignorance of how this all works though. Like many of you, I am new and here because of the reddexodus.

      These servers are going to cost money, and for many of them the money will run out. Is there a function to preserve the collective content of an entire server once it goes dark? I know that you can migrate your own account to another server, but what happens to everything Google has indexed at Lemmy.world if the worst happens? Is it all just dead links? What if many of the users do not migrate? Is it just gone?

      I am concerned that in the current state we are setting up to burn everything that loses a couple admins or becomes too old to economically host.

      • spaduf@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        2 years ago

        Before reddit removed them most of this compiled knowledge was in the subreddit wikis. I honestly believe a return to communities with wikis is the long term replacement.

      • Kotton@beehaw.org
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        2 years ago

        I was on a mastodon server and the owner decided it was not worth his money to keep running. He did not inform anyone on the server or allow any account backups and all was lost.

        • dan@upvote.au
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          2 years ago

          With federated services, I feel like it’s somewhat important to get to know the admins of the server you use. You don’t have to be best friends, but at least know their name, motivation for running the server, and how it’s funded.

      • Jeena@jemmy.jeena.net
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        2 years ago

        In practice the content is distributed to all the other servers, so people who have been reading it before will still be able to on their own instance, but you’re right the indexed domain is gone and so are the results in Google.

        But there is one difference, one instance of lemmy only stores a very small fraction of the content. And it’s much easier to fuck up one reddit compared to fuck up thousands of lemmy instances simultaneously. So if one instance goes down, the rest of the fediverse is still up and running.

      • jamesravey@lemmy.nopro.be
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        2 years ago

        I think it’s a fair concern. We’ve seen other parts of the fediverse successfully implement crowd sourced funding via patron and similar to keep mastodon servers running and I suspect if Lemmy remains “the place to be” admins will have reasonable success with a similar model. Lemmy is super efficient and can support 100s of users on a single box so I think if 1% of users paid like $5 a month you could probably still support 99% of users “for free”.

      • Word of Mouth@lemmy.sdf.org
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        2 years ago

        These are certainly possibilities! It’s happened elsewhere in the Fediverse… but already we can export most of our data and migrate to a different instance. Getting these base features right is important before enhancing their functionality. Planning for the future is important too. So far I’ve been impressed by Lemmy, though it’s not nearly as portable as Mastodon or Calckey or Pleroma etc. Part of that is that in Lemmy/kbin we don’t follow other users… we subscribe to groups (subs/communities/magazines).

        Still, with the nature of ActivityPub, it’s inevitable that migration tools for Reddit-like federated apps will get built quick-like

      • Concetta@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        2 years ago

        I’m sorry, but clearly you have not looked for niche information on Google for a while now. Lots of links end in dead ones, particularly when I am looking for vehicle information on older models.

        • twack@lemmy.world
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          2 years ago

          I’m not sure what you are trying to say, we shouldn’t be concerned because this problem already happened?

          A lot niche older vehicle information, if it wasn’t hosted on Reddit, was often on forums funded by enthusiasts, which eventually ran out of money and no longer exist. This is exactly the problem that I’m concerned about. Particularly so if a certain community balloons in popularity and an admin nukes it to keep the server costs under control for the other members.

    • LunarticBot@beehaw.org
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      2 years ago

      I just can’t agree more with you. Like wow this reddit blackout has truthfully opened my eyes to the massive, giant and incredibly amount of useful information that is currently resting on reddit servers.

      • KNova@links.dartboard.social
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        2 years ago

        Yep. I blog infrequently but I’ve said a few times in my posts, I am writing this article because I need to remember the steps to do this weird niche thing in case something breaks in the future. If it happens to help someone else out, great.

    • Lanthanae@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      2 years ago

      One thing the FOSS world really needs to get on right now is some form of search engine accessible distributed content archival. We need a way to store useful content from the past in a way that no one individual or group of individuals is capable of deleting it.

  • forgotmylastusername@lemmy.ml
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    2 years ago

    Am I the only one that’s noticed how reddit has been fucking with web crawlers? They insert newer comments into older posts so the crawlers pick up false results.

    A few years back they started injecting a “related posts” box into pages. What that does is multiply the amount of results a crawler will pick up. But all those are false results. There’s only one true search result which is the original comment/post. Some times I find myself sifting though the search engine results to find the actual original post. The rest are completely worthless, off topic, reddit posts littering the search index.

    I know all this blackout stuff hurts now. I see it as necessary for the platform to lose its status as the “front page of the internet”. Reddit turned evil a long time ago. It’s long past time it be deposed of.

    • Griseowulfin@beehaw.org
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      2 years ago

      That explains why the search page quotes a comment that doesn’t exist on the post. That always confused me. It’s insane how dependent on searching with “reddit” appended on the end of the search term I am. I have qualms as to how this’ll bode for search engines if reddit loses interest or goes under.

    • MigratingApe@lemmy.world
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      2 years ago

      I couldn’t understand how those changes back then crippling the user experience were “better” in any way, this explains a lot!

  • Plume (She/Her)@beehaw.org
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    2 years ago

    Reddit actions are tragic for the web. I can’t even tell you how many times I searched something and typed Reddit at the end of the query. Not just because Reddit search SUCKS, but mostly because it’s a gold mine of information. Especially for technical stuff.

    Your game crash? Reddit. Weird bug on your laptop? Reddit. Looking for a cool app? Reddit. Have a weird question? Reddit.

    Reddit saved me countless hours and headache. I felt that yesterday when doing a search about something without even putting Reddit on it, kept bringing up Reddit links. I’d click on it without reading and end up on a locked sub because of the blackout.

    It sucks but I hope it’s going to continue. But at the same time, I don’t see Reddit backing down. And even lf they do? I’m not going back. Because how dare you? Like… screw you for even trying to pull that crap on your users.

    • OrthoStice@feddit.it
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      2 years ago

      Agree, but I think that’s the point: this is the proof we have to switch to a different model. It will take time to replace Reddit as the huge information source it was (and to a certain extent still is), but I’m willing to hope it can happen.

    • reric88🧩@beehaw.org
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      2 years ago

      Try using ChatGPT if you haven’t. Ive used Reddit in the past for a lot of troubleshooting, but ChatGPT is easier to get the answers I’m looking for unless I asked the question myself. But there’s no judgement from ChatGPT lol

      • arcturus@lemmy.world
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        2 years ago

        Though, take care to factcheck what you get from it; all it really is is just a word predictor, and it can be pretty good at confidently telling you absolute nonsense that sounds right

        • reric88🧩@beehaw.org
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          2 years ago

          Definitely true, however my usage of it has been to troubleshoot code. I wouldn’t suggest using it for research purposes

    • nephs@lemmy.world
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      2 years ago

      Reddit is the web we built. And fuck u/spez decided to give it away for money.

      I miss Aaron Swartz and the open web. Let’s rebuilt it again, on better foundations!

  • yads@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    Had this happen today. Was searching for some programming related stuff and top pages are all inaccessible Reddit posts.

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        2 years ago

        Ditto, actually. The 3D printing communities I’ve seen here are just so much smaller.

    • lwaxana_katana@beehaw.org
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      2 years ago

      Hopefully it will help people realise that a profit motive being attached to everything is actually counterproductive societally.

    • GreyBeard@lemmy.one
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      2 years ago

      About 4 people at work Monday discovered the blackouts and learned the reason from following Google results. I’d say that shows the effectiveness of the protest. That’s 4 individuals that I work with personally who wouldn’t have known otherwise about the api problem that now do. I can only imagine how many people are in that same boat.

    • worfamerryman@beehaw.org
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      2 years ago

      Same, but it’s just growing pains.

      We should start rewriting posts in lemmy with the correct information.

      • James_Harmony@fedia.io
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        2 years ago

        Sad thing is most search engines suck/haven’t really indexed mostly anything in the fediverse. Wonder why

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          2 years ago

          The fediverse is really not good for big companies. It cannot be monetized or controlled.

          It’s obvious you know this, but we just need a search engine that’s tuned to search the fediverse.

  • ryuko@lemmy.ml
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    2 years ago

    This also highlights the problem with a lot of communities moving to Discord, which inevitably ends up as repositories for critical information, but can’t be indexed by Google. Reddit is still valuable as a problem solving resource, and I hope they fix this API fiasco.

    • j4k3@lemmy.world
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      2 years ago

      I’m willing to bet the lack of api access going forward will make all reddit posts disappear from crawler results anyways. I’m no expert, but I imagine the crawler is picking up on all of the interconnected references to reddit that are all due to free api access. As soon as those connections disappear, so dies the value to the entire community. It will be just like the garbage results we get from every single source now. This is the path of neo digital feudalism.

      • jamesravey@lemmy.nopro.be
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        2 years ago

        API calls are almost always private between the caller and the endpoint (think telegram bots or mobile apps). There isn’t really a technically feasible way for a crawler to somehow “infer” any kind of knowledge of how api calls are being used unless the result has some kind of publically visible side effect (E. G. The program using the api is generating a web page and uploading it somewhere crawlable). Google et Al go by how many links from other pages to the page of interest exist (inbound links) and multiply by a smattering of other things like quality of keywords, length of content etc.

        That said, if you’re implying that the api changes mean that:

        • people are less likely to use reddit because they can’t access it via RIF/Apollo
        • less useful content is added to the site to be indexed,
        • fewer inbound links will be generated that point to existing posts
        • pages stagnate and drop in ranking

        That is a plausible concern.

        • j4k3@lemmy.world
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          fewer inbound links will be generated that point to existing posts

          pages stagnate and drop in ranking

          This is what I mean, the external references people had in the periphery will dry up. Like if I’m not using Infinity to generate better refined search results, now I don’t post the link to Stack Exchange, and this reference fails to cascade across various copy paste blog resources. Now the original reddit post is a dead end source with no external weighted reference value. It’s all of these advanced features implemented in the periphery using the free API that create the usefulness in the first place.

          Searching reddit will be just like YouTube searches now. No matter what technical wording you use, you’ll never find technical references again. I can type the title of a video on YT verbatim and still won’t get the correct results, but I can log into an old account and find the content in my hundreds of playlists I kept as references. It is still there, it is still public.

    • raresbears@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      The other thing is that Discord search is god awful. There’s absolutely no way to modify your search for better results, whether that’s to require something to appear exactly as typed, or to exclude certain results, it’s just you put in the words and hope you get the right thing. Sometimes that works out, but sometimes it will make the dumbest connections and render your search useless unless you want to trawl through pages of crap you don’t want. Like I’ve found out that Discord considers the words universal, universe, and university to be the same…

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    People rely far too heavily on reddit for public resources. Here’s hoping that changes now.

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    2 years ago

    Tacking “Reddit” onto search queries almost became a prerequisite. Never imagined I’d have to replace that with “-Reddit”.

    It’s made researching a media centre setup very difficult this week…

    • MigratingApe@lemmy.world
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      Give it some time, people will get comfortable here, the revolution dust will settle an we will be adding ‘-Reddit “Lemmy”’ to search queries (fingers crossed!)

      • DarthRedLeader@lemmy.world
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        2 years ago

        But how would this work with broader federation? Searching other instances like beehaw or kbin? We’ll needan new search optimization to search the fediverse more efficiently.

  • spaduf@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    Before reddit removed them most of this compiled knowledge was in the subreddit wikis. I honestly believe a return to communities with wikis is the long term replacement.

    • TerryTPlatypus@beehaw.org
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      Honestly, not a bad opinion, when the wikis were done well, they did have some extremely useful information. I wonder if we could do something like that in Lemmy…

      • Deebster@beehaw.org
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        2 years ago

        That was my first thought - if reddit doesn’t want that feature, we’ll take it!

    • 🦊 OneRedFox 🦊@beehaw.org
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      It would be interesting if Fediverse platforms made an external wiki for discoverability. A big shared community resource all in one place.

    • GhostMagician@beehaw.org
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      Yeah, the wikis came in clutch a lot of times for me. Really well done with how organized they were for the ones that had them.

  • thejml@lemm.ee
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    2 years ago

    Definitely saw this coming… can’t imagine what will happen if Stack Overflow pulls something similar. All WebDev/DevOps work will halt overnight.

    I’ve been trying to put my issues/solutions in a personal blog or wiki, but there’s so much old info out there in sites like Reddit/SO/medium/etc, it’d be a huge loss when it goes away.

    • PenguinTD@lemmy.ca
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      Maybe it really is time to get open sourced AI and bots to archive useful information so they don’t get monopolized.

        • AccurstDemon@sopuli.xyz
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          2 years ago

          One thing that is designed to be future-proof is MarkDown, I’ve been taking profesional and personal notes and exporting important information from web pages to markdown and hosting it on my own PC for a while.

          MarkDown it’s text based so you can have a huge amount of data with just a tiny bit of space. And it is easily translated/rendered as HTML. Apps like Logseq, Obsidian or Markor are good starts for managing huge vaults of information.

          I’m thinking that whe should create a MarkDown community here.

    • ollien@beehaw.org
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      At least with SO, they have historically put up dumps of all user data on archive.org (that stopped recently but it’s allegedly coming back). If something were to happen, at least the information would still be decently accessible, just not indexed as well.

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      We’re going to have to actually read official documentation instead of relying on some greybeard’s wisdom on SO 🥲

  • tymon@lemmy.one
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    2 years ago

    This has been deeply frustrating, but since that’s the whole point, I support this collective inconvenience.

    • Brunacho@feddit.cl
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      2 years ago

      All in all it’s also a testament of how bad internet is now. All the information is concentrated in few sites that, if gone, gets lost.

      • catshit_dogfart@lemmy.ml
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        2 years ago

        Also, I find that basically every search result that isn’t reddit is sponsored content.

        Search something real specific like “Best aftermarket injector coils for a 2009 Toyota Corolla” and you’re going to get 100% advertisements and listicles for search results, likely written by somebody who doesn’t know shit about cars.

        Append “reddit” to that search, and you’ll be led to a post from a car mechanic giving their opinion on the matter. And, well, I do trust a random stranger on the internet more than I do an advertisement.

  • halictuz@beehaw.org
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    For many people google (or whatever engine) was just a gateway to get informations on reddit. With all those sub reddits down at the moment, a lot of searches are really hard to get informations, because like it, or not, reddit is a big part of getting informations or opinions etc.

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    I’ve actively found this as well but honestly, I think it’s for the best because most of the time Reddit posts with actual answers aren’t well-cited. So if anyone asks how you know something, “uhh Reddit told me” is pretty weak. So Google is getting better because Reddit has gotten worse. It means that you have to go to the actual articles and find the actual sources instead of this daisy chain of information. We have a huge issue with misinformation and this actually helps resolve it.

    • nodiet@feddit.de
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      Wait you use reddit posts to inform yourself on things where misinformation is possible? I also was mildy inconvenienced by the blackouts but it was mostly related to programming stuff, where it is very obvious if an answer is wrong. I don’t think I would even consider using reddit as a source for anything factual

      • MJBrune@beehaw.org
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        I work as a game developer and a programmer. There are a lot of possibilities for people to be wrong. Especially when it comes to design or usage. A lot of misinformation in programming is like “Yeah this answer is technically correct” with this specific case but when you scale it, it breaks entirely. Like https://forums.unrealengine.com/t/stealth-based-mechanics/6992/6 is a great example where yeah a trace will work, your data will be inaccurate a bit, you won’t be able to scale it and it won’t work with a lot of edge case lighting. The better solution is to use a grey-colored mesh and a scene capture to get information consistently about both the baked and dynamic lighting. You might even have a better way, like getting the data from lumen or shadow maps.

        So even with things you think won’t have misinformation, you get misinformation, and people are guessing while presenting they are right.

    • oshitwaddup@lemmy.antemeridiem.xyz
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      All the stuff i would use reddit as an actual source for is things where it’s either obvious that the person is wrong or easy to check or think through. Same for lemmy

      • crisisingot@beehaw.org
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        Yeah I mostly use it for like product reviews/recommendations or like personal help topics. Not stuff where factual information is required

    • Brunacho@feddit.cl
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      We have a huge issue with misinformation and this actually helps resolve it.

      I’m not really sure about that. Bad SEO is something that still exists, and with huge sites like Reddit gone, the bad SEO sites become more prominent which is not necessarily the site with actual articles and sources.

      Of course the solution to this is not reddit back but stopping SEO and having better curation of sites in search engines somehow.