Seeing low activity here, I was thinking of creating a bot which can bring content from /r/india. Here’s what I have in mind:

  1. Every hour, post top 30 posts from /r/india to /c/india
  2. Also cross-post comments from all the posts we cross-post i.e if someone posts a comment on reddit, post it here; and if someone responds to a comment here, re-post it on appropriate thread in reddit

What do guys think? Is it a good idea? In my mind it can help break content monopoly of reddit.

  • poVoq
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    2 years ago

    deleted by creator

  • nutomicA
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    4 years ago

    Definitely get in contact with us admins before setting up any bot, I’m not sure we want to allow that on this instance.

    • dualinverterOP
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      4 years ago

      I’m not sure we want to allow that on this instance.

      Why not?

      • nutomicA
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        4 years ago

        Because if Lemmy is full posts mirrored from Reddit, then people might decide its better to visit Reddit directly. I think its better if we build our own, independent community here, and maybe mirror posts manually on a case by case basis.

        • dualinverterOP
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          4 years ago

          I can respect that. I was approaching the same thing from other side, if I can get everything from reddit here, I won’t need to visit Reddit. Perhaps I should invest in a RSS-reader kind of aggregator that can do that purely client side.

          • nutomicA
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            4 years ago

            One thing you could do is setup a separate Lemmy instance for Reddit crossposts. Then lemmy.ml and other instances could decide to federate with that or not.

  • DessalinesA
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    4 years ago

    I’d like to add that we did recently add bot accounts, and the ability to hide bot posts / comments in your settings.

  • LunaticHacker
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    4 years ago

    Some suggestions: *Don’t cross post comments *And reduce the frequency of posts ,30/hr is too much

    • dualinverterOP
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      4 years ago

      Agreed. It won’t be 30 every hour though, it’ll end up being like 2/3 per hour on a normal day. Most posts on /r/india stays there on top for a while.

      Why not cross-post comments though? I personally find this feature very appealing.

      • LunaticHacker
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        4 years ago

        If it’s implemented like you said in the post it might encourage spam.

        • dualinverterOP
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          4 years ago

          It being spam didn’t even cross my mind. lol You’re right, cross-content for one can be spam for other. I was thinking in terms of Matrix bridges, which are also common in other chat ecosystems. e.g most ecosystems I’ve encountered (slack, zulip, discord, mattermost) have one way or other to interop with IRC. There usually is a bot which cross-posts whenever there is a message on IRC and vice-versa.

        • dualinverterOP
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          4 years ago

          That sounds impractical. What else do you consider behavior-to-avoid, other than low quality and reposts? Do lemmy has anything in built to avoid reposts, or low quality posts? Goals on lemmy.ml don’t mention this. Is this something you personally want, or are these !india@lemmy.ml goals?

          I hope I am not coming off as argumentative/offensive. I am genuinely curious.

            • SFloss (they/them)
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              4 years ago

              I agree. Early Lemmy, while not particularly active, had a lot of good posts and the community was incredibly kind and developed good discussions in the comments. That quality and community is still present, of course, but as we’ve grown, I’ve already seen elements of Reddit creeping in: low quality nonsense comments, an increasing amount of liberals and reactionaries, techno-chauvinists who separate technology from politics, etc. I want Lemmy to grow, but not at the expense of it’s idiosyncrasies that separated it from Reddit.

  • LollerCorleone@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    The community over at india@kbin.social has been more active, or at least has a dedicated set of folks who have been posting content. Maybe its better to concentrate the activity there rather than splinter between lemmy and kbin instances.