| @dkobia | |
| Nostr | npub1ynflwp4l4vm0sp948tnuscwug9x4r540r0czsthq6p94sz434yjs4xwfm8 |
| Github | https://github.com/dkobia |
| @dkobia | |
| Nostr | npub1ynflwp4l4vm0sp948tnuscwug9x4r540r0czsthq6p94sz434yjs4xwfm8 |
| Github | https://github.com/dkobia |
I grew up in an observant (devout?) Muslim household. When I questioned my faith, my folks didn't ban books. They encouraged me to read books by Muslims AND non-Muslims—Christian, Jewish, atheist, or other. It was life changing. And it's a message I'm passing on to my children now, and one I hope they pass to their children when the time comes.
Parents: Trust your kids. Ban ignorance—not books.
Algorithms aren't the enemy. Chronological feeds don't scale and the signal-to-noise ratio will plummet if this ever gets popular. The real problems with today's algorithmic feeds are non-transparency, lack of choice, and optimizing for engagement instead of healthy discourse.
Open-source is a perfect opportunity to fix all this. Have there been any efforts to create a Mastodon instance with a (community governed) ranking algorithm? Is that technically feasible? Or is the idea simply anathema?