During covid I temporarily switched departments for a few months.
The mid-50s or so lady in charge of the department decided it was a good idea to have daily, 30 minute meetings that started at 6:45.
For reference, work was normally 9-5. But I guess she thought that since everything was remote and no one had to commute, everyone would be ok with this? Felt pretty disrespectful to me but I guess maybe everyone in that department were early risers or something.
So for a few months I'd wake up, do the meeting, then go back to bed.
But hey I used to do 14 hour shifts working security during college so it could be worse.
This is one of the main differences between reddit and mainchan. Removing a post on reddit is basically like locking it. It states why the post has been "removed" (still visible when going to the link, can still see comments) and it shows the rule being broken.
I do plan on adding an exemption list on /all for subchans but blocking all submissions and comments from particular users would increase overall query times by quite a bit and would require quite a lot of code refactoring so that's probably not going to happen.
Doesn't really make sense. I need it to be shown that someone replying to a comment is actually replying to something. If the parent comment is DELETED then the viewer has context clues that the child reply is a response to the comment, not the submission.
sure
It'll be easier to claim the subs, yes. But you can just add mods.
I use this package for embeding: https://github.com/KaneCohen/oembed
I would maybe edit this package myself but it would be pretty low on the priority list.
can't delete accounts at the moment. He had to do it manually.
I do the same thing when I go to reddit lol
Ok I added this feature. Not gonna make a post about it since it's too small a change.
During covid I temporarily switched departments for a few months.
The mid-50s or so lady in charge of the department decided it was a good idea to have daily, 30 minute meetings that started at 6:45.
For reference, work was normally 9-5. But I guess she thought that since everything was remote and no one had to commute, everyone would be ok with this? Felt pretty disrespectful to me but I guess maybe everyone in that department were early risers or something.
So for a few months I'd wake up, do the meeting, then go back to bed.
But hey I used to do 14 hour shifts working security during college so it could be worse.
Ok I'll add this in the next update.
I have. I could provide an API for Everything but I'm not sure. Still thinking of just building my own app.
Fun fact: Terry Davis wrote the source code for Mainchan.
I could make one I guess
bazinga
I don't think I'd want that. Any time I've seen that done on reddit it's a way for the mod/admin team to escape criticism.
nah you can approve a post from the get-go, like reddit.
This could be a browser extension, pretty easily.
>The NSFL filter only works on posts/subs voluntarily tagged by their creator.
Technically they have to as per the rules. Mods who don't enforce the global rules can have their mod team removed.
then what about things like saving comments? I'd rather the user is shown "DELETED" than think the website is broken and not properly saving comments.
This is one of the main differences between reddit and mainchan. Removing a post on reddit is basically like locking it. It states why the post has been "removed" (still visible when going to the link, can still see comments) and it shows the rule being broken.
If a post is getting spam reported, you can just click Approve to clear reports for that post and stop future reports.
I do plan on adding an exemption list on /all for subchans but blocking all submissions and comments from particular users would increase overall query times by quite a bit and would require quite a lot of code refactoring so that's probably not going to happen.
Ok sure I can make this a user option.
Doesn't really make sense. I need it to be shown that someone replying to a comment is actually replying to something. If the parent comment is DELETED then the viewer has context clues that the child reply is a response to the comment, not the submission.
I miss old 4chan. 05-16 were the best years.